ArXiv TLDR

Reputational Spillovers

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2604.08616

Aditya Kuvalekar, Anna Sanktjohanser

econ.THecon.GN

TLDR

This paper analyzes reputational spillovers in simultaneous bargaining, showing they can make a central player worse off and overturn the "toughness pays" prediction.

Key contributions

  • Analyzes a simultaneous bargaining game with a central player and two peripherals, where central player's type is global.
  • Finds reputational spillovers are payoff-relevant only if a peripheral is initially the most reputable.
  • Demonstrates spillovers overturn the "toughness pays" prediction from bilateral bargaining.
  • Shows central player is worse off, strongest peripheral loses, and weakest peripheral can benefit.

Why it matters

This paper challenges the conventional wisdom that "toughness pays" in bargaining by introducing reputational spillovers. It offers a new framework for understanding multi-party negotiations where actions in one dispute impact others, providing crucial insights for strategic interactions.

Original Abstract

We analyze a reputational bargaining game in which a central player negotiates simultaneously with two peripheral players. Each player is either rational or a commitment type who never concedes and insists on a fixed share, and concessions are publicly observed. The central player's type is global, so actions in one dispute update beliefs in the other and generate reputational spillovers. The game admits a unique equilibrium, enabling a sharp comparison with the bilateral benchmark of Abreu and Gul (2000). Spillovers are payoff-relevant if and only if a peripheral is uniquely the most reputable player initially. In that case, spillovers overturn the bilateral prediction that toughness pays: the central player is never strictly better off and can be strictly worse off; the strongest peripheral loses; and the weakest peripheral can benefit, especially when the center's higher-stakes dispute is with the other peripheral.

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