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Evaluating a Negotiation Strategy
Analyze the senior manager's argument. From the perspective of a single, isolated negotiation where the primary goal is to achieve the best possible financial outcome for the company in this specific instance, what is the primary flaw in the manager's reasoning?
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Evaluating a Negotiation Strategy
A labor strike can be modeled as a type of strategic interaction game. Match each element of the labor strike scenario with its corresponding component in the game theory model.
A company projects it will lose $2 million in revenue from a potential strike. The labor union, acting as a single entity, demands a wage and benefits increase that will cost the company a total of $1.5 million over the contract period. In this strategic interaction, the company can either accept the union's demand or reject it, with a rejection leading directly to a strike. If the company's management is acting as a perfectly rational agent whose only goal is to maximize its financial outcome in this specific negotiation, what should it do?
Critique of the Ultimatum Game Model for Labor Strikes
In a strategic interaction model of a labor negotiation, if an employer rejects a union's final wage demand, the resulting strike is typically an outcome where both parties are financially better off than if the employer had accepted the demand.
In a simplified model of a labor negotiation where one party makes a final, take-it-or-leave-it offer that ultimately leads to a work stoppage, arrange the following events in the logical order they would occur.
Explaining the Labor Strike Model
A manufacturing company anticipates that a potential labor strike would cost it $10 million in lost profits. The labor union, representing the workers, presents a final, non-negotiable demand for a new benefits package that would cost the company $8 million. From a purely financial perspective within this single negotiation, accepting the demand is the better option. However, the company's management rejects the demand, triggering a costly strike. Which of the following provides the most likely strategic reason for the company's seemingly irrational decision?
Calculating a Strike's Financial Breakeven Point
Evaluating a Union's Bargaining Strategy