Someone at a party pulls out a $100 bill and announces that he is going to auction it off. There are n=10 people at the party who are potential bidders. The owner of the $100 bill puts forth the following procedure: All bidders simultaneously submit a written bid. Only the highest bidders pay their bid (assuming that the highest bid is positive). If m people submit the highest bid, then each receives 1/m of the $100. Each person’s strategy set is {0,1,2,...,1000}{0,1,2,...,1000} so bidding can go as high as $1,000. The payoff of a player bidding bi​ is: 0 if bi​ < max{b1​,b2​,…,bn​}, and 100/m ​− bi​ if bi​ = max {b1​,b2​,…,bn​} where,m is the number of bidders whose bid equals max{b1​,...,bn​}. How many pure-strategy Nash equilibria does this game have? 1) 0 2) 1 3) 4 4) More than 4.

Managerial Economics: A Problem Solving Approach
5th Edition
ISBN:9781337106665
Author:Luke M. Froeb, Brian T. McCann, Michael R. Ward, Mike Shor
Publisher:Luke M. Froeb, Brian T. McCann, Michael R. Ward, Mike Shor
Chapter18: Auctions
Section: Chapter Questions
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Someone at a party pulls out a $100 bill and announces that he is going to auction it off. There are n=10 people at the party
who are potential bidders. The owner of the $100 bill puts forth the following procedure: All bidders simultaneously submit a written bid. Only the highest bidders pay their bid (assuming that the highest bid is positive). If m people submit the highest bid, then each receives 1/m of the $100. Each person’s strategy set is {0,1,2,...,1000}{0,1,2,...,1000} so bidding can go as high as $1,000.

The payoff of a player bidding bi​ is:


0 if bi​ < max{b1​,b2​,…,bn​},

and

100/m ​− bi​ if bi​ = max {b1​,b2​,…,bn​}


where,m is the number of bidders whose bid equals max{b1​,...,bn​}.

How many pure-strategy Nash equilibria does this game have?

  1) 0
  2) 1
  3) 4
  4) More than 4.
 
 
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