Learn Before
Partnership Profit-Split Negotiation
Analyze the following negotiation scenario. In your analysis, identify the 'rules of the game' and the 'preferences' of each party. Then, explain how these two determinants interact to influence the likely final outcome.
0
1
Tags
Library Science
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Related
Conflicting Social Preferences in Negotiations
Anastasia's Decision to Share Roman Coins with Belinda
Ultimatum Game
Effect of Competition on Negotiation Outcomes
Dividing Profits in a Joint App Business
Dividing the Asset
Imagine a negotiation where a Proposer must offer a split of $100 to a single Responder. If the Responder accepts, the money is split as proposed; if they reject, neither person receives anything. Now, consider a change to this structure: the Proposer still has $100 but now faces two Responders. The Proposer makes a single take-it-or-leave-it offer, and the first Responder to accept it gets the offered amount, while the Proposer keeps the remainder. How would the introduction of a second Responder most likely affect the share of the $100 that the Proposer offers?
Explaining Different Bargaining Outcomes
In any negotiation, the final outcome is influenced by the 'rules of the game' (the institutional structure of the interaction) and the 'preferences' of the participants (their personal values, such as fairness or self-interest). For each scenario described in the left column, match it to the primary determinant in the right column that best explains the behavior or outcome.
True or False: In a one-time negotiation to split a sum of money, if the only preference of both participants is to maximize their own personal gain, the specific process used for the negotiation (e.g., who makes the first offer, whether counter-offers are allowed) will not affect the final division of the money.
Evaluating a Bargaining Outcome
In the study of negotiation, the two primary factors that determine how a contested resource will be divided are the participants' personal values, known as their preferences, and the set of established procedures that structure the interaction, known as the _________.
Partnership Profit-Split Negotiation
The Impact of Fairness Preference on Negotiation Strategy
Task Division Dilemma
Interaction of Social Norms and Individual Preferences in Bargaining
Bargaining Problem: Dividing a Found $100 Note
Two Grounds for Judging Fairness: Substantive vs. Procedural
Interaction of Social Norms and Individual Preferences in Bargaining