
handle: 10016/27150 , 10419/197147 , 10278/3719982
We analyze a setting common in privatizations, public tenders, and takeovers in which the ex post efficient allocation, i.e., the first best, is not implementable. Our first main result is that the open ascending auction is not second best because it is prone to rushes, i.e., all active bidders quitting simultaneously, that undermine its efficiency. Our second main result is that the second best can be implemented with a two-round auction used in real-life privatizations. We also show how this result generalizes using a survival auction with a novel tie-breaking rule.
auctions; efficiency; mechanism design; multi-round mechanisms; Privatization, Auctions, ddc:330, Mechanism design, Efficiency, mechanism design, privatization, Privatization, Multi-round mechanisms, Economía, Auctions, bargaining, bidding and selling, and other market models, D82, efficiency, multi-round mechanisms, auctions, D44
auctions; efficiency; mechanism design; multi-round mechanisms; Privatization, Auctions, ddc:330, Mechanism design, Efficiency, mechanism design, privatization, Privatization, Multi-round mechanisms, Economía, Auctions, bargaining, bidding and selling, and other market models, D82, efficiency, multi-round mechanisms, auctions, D44
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