Jump Bidding and Budget Constraints in All-Pay Auctions and Wars of Attrition
release_rev_d5ab79dc-5ae7-476e-bc7a-d378ac4a9c3f
by
Eddie Dekel,
Matthew Jackson,
Asher Wolinsky
2006
Abstract
We study all-pay auctions (or wars of attrition), where the highest bidder wins an object, but all bidders pay their bids. We consider such auctions when two bidders alternate in raising their bids and where all aspects of the auction are common knowledge including bidders' valuations. We analyze how the ability to "jump-bid," or raise bids by more than the minimal necessary increment a¤ects the outcome of the auction. We also study the impact of budget caps on total bids. We show that both of these features, which are common in practice but absent from the previous literature, matter signi…cantly in determining the outcome of the auctions. JEL classi…cation: C62,C63,C72,D44,D82 Leininger (1991) contains results very similar to most of the results in this paper. Nevertheless, because there are some small di¤erences in the model and the exposition is di¤erent, we are making this manuscript available, while emphasizing that versions of the main results herein were previously published by Leininger (1991). y Dekel is at the
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