A study of zero-out auctions: testbed experiments of a process of allocating private rights to the use of public property
Abstract
This paper applies an experimental testbed methodology to the evaluation of a proposed mechanism for allocating the right to land at the New York airports. The mechanism is called a "zero-out auction" because it is supposed to allocate the rights efficiently like an auction while leaving all of the consumer's surplus with the buyers (as opposed to allocating some to the seller as would be the case with an ordinary auction). A new behavioral hypothesis is introduced to account for limited rationality of individuals and unusual behaviors of the process. The axiom, called theunbiased expectations hypothesis, does a good job of modeling individual behavior in the context of a game model.
Acknowledgement
We acknowledge the financial support of the National Science Foundation and the Caltech Laboratory for Experimental Economics and Political Science. Comments by David Grether, John Ledyard, Michael Levine, Jennifer Reinganum, and Richard Sutch have been very helpful.
Copyright and License
© 1994 Springer-Verlag.
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Additional details
- NSF
- Caltech Laboratory for Experimental Economics and Political Science
- Submitted
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1992-09-14Received
- Updated
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1993-05-14Revised
- Available
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1994-01Issue date
- Caltech groups
- Social Science Working Papers
- Other Numbering System Name
- Social Science Working Paper
- Other Numbering System Identifier
- 650
- Publication Status
- Published