Critiquing an Experimental Design for Policy Recommendations
A researcher conducts an experiment to understand wage negotiations. In the experiment, university students are randomly assigned the roles of 'employer' and 'worker' by a coin flip. They then negotiate how to split a $20 bonus. The most common result is a 50/50 split ($10 each). Based on this, the researcher argues that real-world employers are inclined to be fair and that policies like minimum wage laws may be unnecessary. Evaluate the researcher's policy argument. What is the primary limitation of using this specific experimental setup to draw conclusions about real-world wage negotiations?
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
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Sources of Bargaining Power
Evaluating the External Validity of Economic Experiments
In a laboratory experiment where two anonymous participants play a one-time game to divide a sum of money, the role of 'proposer' is assigned by a coin flip. Proposers in this setting typically offer the 'responder' a substantial share (e.g., 40-50%). In contrast, many real-world negotiations over economic surplus, such as between a large established firm and a new, small supplier, often result in a much less equal division. Which of the following statements best analyzes the primary reason for this difference in outcomes?
Real-World vs. Experimental Bargaining Power
The results of economic experiments where bargaining roles are assigned by chance (e.g., a coin flip) are highly reliable for directly predicting the specific division of resources in most real-world negotiations, such as those between a landlord and a tenant.
An economist observes that in a laboratory game where the role of 'proposer' is assigned by a coin flip, proposers offer, on average, 40% of the total sum to 'responders'. Based solely on this finding, the economist concludes that in a real-world negotiation between a single powerful employer and a potential employee with few other job options, the employer will likely offer the worker about 40% of the value they jointly create. Which statement best identifies the primary flaw in this conclusion?
Match each concept to the description that best explains its role in determining bargaining power in either an experimental or a real-world context.
Evaluating Claims Based on Experimental Evidence
Critiquing Policy Based on Experimental Evidence
Critiquing an Experimental Design for Policy Recommendations