Teaching an old dog a new trick: Reserve price and unverifiable quality in repeated procurement

B-Tier
Journal: Journal of Economics & Management Strategy
Year: 2023
Volume: 32
Issue: 2
Pages: 377-399

Authors (3)

Gian Luigi Albano (not in RePEc) Berardino Cesi (not in RePEc) Alberto Iozzi (Università degli Studi di Roma...)

Score contribution per author:

0.670 = (α=2.01 / 3 authors) × 1.0x B-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

This paper shows that, in a repeated competitive procurement, a buyer can use the reserve price in a low‐price auction as a “public”—hence nondiscriminatory—incentive device to elicit unverifiable quality. We study a model with many firms and one buyer, who is imperfectly informed on the firms' costs. When firms are ex ante identical, the provision of quality is sustained by a sufficiently high reserve price to reward firms for the quality provision and by the threat of setting a low reserve price forever, if quality is not delivered. The buyer can elicit the desired level of unverifiable quality provided her baseline valuation of the project is not too high and the net benefit from unverifiable quality is not too low. These results are robust to firms' heterogeneity in their time preferences when the punishment for a deviation is finite but sufficiently long.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:bla:jemstr:v:32:y:2023:i:2:p:377-399
Journal Field
Industrial Organization
Author Count
3
Added to Database
2026-01-25