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Paper #1790

Title:
Renegotiation and discrimination in symmetric procurement auctions
Authors:
Leandro Arozamena, Juan José Ganuza and Federico Weinschelbaum
Date:
July 2021
Abstract:
In order to make competition open, fair and transparent, procurement regulations often require equal treatment for all bidders. This paper shows how a favorite supplier can be treated preferentially (opening the door to home bias and corruption) even when explicit discrimination is not allowed. We analyze a procurement setting in which the optimal design of the project to be contracted is unknown. The sponsor has to invest in specifying the project. The larger the investment, the higher the probability that the initial design is optimal. When it is not, a bargaining process between the winning firm and the sponsor takes place. Profits from bargaining are larger for the favorite supplier than for its rivals. Given this comparative advantage, the favored firm bids more aggressively and then, it wins more often than standard firms. Finally, we show that the sponsor invests less in specifying the initial design, when favoritism is stronger. Underinvestment in design specification is a tool for providing a comparative advantage to the favored firm.
Keywords:
auctions, favoritism, auction design, renegotiation, corruption
JEL codes:
I12, J13, H31, H24
Area of Research:
Behavioral and Experimental Economics

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