Evaluating Negotiation Strategies
In a one-time, take-it-or-leave-it business negotiation, Company A must propose a way to split a $10 million profit with Company B. If Company B accepts, the profit is split as proposed. If Company B rejects the offer, the deal is off, and both companies get nothing. Company A is considering two possible offers. Evaluate the two offers below and argue which one is strategically superior for Company A. Your justification must focus on the power held by Company B.
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Ch.5 The rules of the game: Who gets what and why - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Bargaining Power in a Single-Offer Negotiation
In a one-time negotiation, Person A is given $100 and must propose a way to split it with Person B. Person B can only accept or reject the proposal. If Person B rejects it, both individuals receive nothing. Person A proposes to keep $99 and give $1 to Person B. From a strategic standpoint, what is the primary reason Person B might reject this offer?
In a single-offer, take-it-or-leave-it negotiation, the person making the offer (the Proposer) holds all the bargaining power because they are the only one who can formulate the terms of the deal.
Evaluating Negotiation Strategies
The Proposer's Dilemma
Evaluating Proposer Strategies in a Single-Offer Negotiation
In a one-time negotiation, a Proposer is given a sum of money to divide with a Responder. The Responder can only accept or reject the proposed split; a rejection means neither party gets anything. How does the Responder's ability to reject the offer fundamentally limit the Proposer's power?
Strategic Offer Formulation
The Proposer's Constraint
Two individuals, a Proposer and a Responder, must divide $100 in a one-time interaction. The Proposer makes a single, final offer on how to split the money. If the Responder accepts, the money is divided as proposed. If the Responder rejects the offer, neither individual receives any money. To maximize their own gain while ensuring the offer is accepted, which of the following proposals is the most strategically sound for the Proposer to make?