Abstract
We consider a model of cost-based procurement in which the principal faces Knightian uncertainty about the agent's preferences for cost reduction. We show that a particularly simple incentive scheme—a menu comprising a fixed-price contract and a cost-reimbursement contract—minimizes the maximum expected payment, where this maximum is taken over the set of possible agent preferences. For some parameters of the problem, a range of alternative incentive schemes also satisfy this criterion. We show that the simple incentive scheme is not weakly dominated by any of the alternatives: there does not exist an alternative mechanism for which the expected payment is no higher for all realizations of the agent's preferences and strictly lower for some realization.
Keywords
Cost-based procurement; Simple mechanisms; Minimax;
JEL codes
- C44: Operations Research • Statistical Decision Theory
- H57: Procurement
- L51: Economics of Regulation
Reference
Daniel F. Garrett, “Robustness of simple menus of contracts in cost-based procurement”, Games and Economic Behavior, vol. 87, September 2014.
Published in
Games and Economic Behavior, vol. 87, September 2014