Personal 18 Sep 2007 11:37 am
Iraq War = Dollar Auction
This was one of the best posts I’ve read all year.
Economics professors have a standard game they use to demonstrate how apparently rational decisions can create a disastrous result. They call it a “dollar auction.” The rules are simple. The professor offers a dollar for sale to the highest bidder, with only one wrinkle: the second-highest bidder has to pay up on their losing bid as well. Several students almost always get sucked in. The first bids a penny, looking to make 99 cents. The second bids 2 cents, the third 3 cents, and so on, each feeling they have a chance at something good on the cheap. The early stages are fun, and the bidders wonder what possessed the professor to be willing to lose some money.
The problem surfaces when the bidders get up close to a dollar. After 99 cents the last vestige of profitability disappears, but the bidding continues between the two highest players. They now realize that they stand to lose no matter what, but that they can still buffer their losses by winning the dollar. They just have to outlast the other player. Following this strategy, the two hapless students usually run the bid up several dollars, turning the apparent shot at easy money into a ghastly battle of spiraling disaster.
Theoretically, there is no stable outcome once the dynamic gets going. The only clear limit is the exhaustion of one of the player’s total funds. In the classroom, the auction generally ends with the grudging decision of one player to “irrationally” accept the larger loss and get out of the terrible spiral. Economists call the dollar auction pattern an irrational escalation of commitment. We might also call it the war in Iraq.
I find this concept very entertaining. It would have made a good business model for eBay ;) . However, I’m incredibly frustrated that the US government is playing this sucker’s game with the lives of human soldiers.
This seems to have been reblogged widely. I found it here, and the original source is here.
4 Responses to “Iraq War = Dollar Auction”

on 18 Sep 2007 at 3:57 pm 1.Hugh Lang said …
That’s also one of my favorite stories. I first read about that one in Peter L. Bernstein’s book “Against the Gods”, one of my favorite books. Bernstein explains the irrationality of auction bidders as a matter of utility. “Utility”, if I can get this right, is the value you place on something you have versus your desire to win (or not lose) something else. Utility explains why some people will gamble what little money they have (on lottery tickets, for example) in exchange for the chance of winning something nearly impossible to attain. In contrast, others with plenty of wealth see little opportunity in gambling.
Auctions are often like that too. The fear of not winning is a big driver for irrational bidding. And auctions primarily deal in illiquid goods with temporal availability. So bidders are extra worried about losing the opportunity.
I dug up this bookmark, which is not directly related to this story, but still interesting to read. (Click through to the referenced article) http://paul.kedrosky.com/archives/001910.html
on 18 Sep 2007 at 7:15 pm 2.Andrew Parker said …
Killer comment.
Reminds me of the recent study of the irrationality of participants on
ebay in determining the value of goods (they do stuff like fail to
incorporate shipping into their valuation, and will even accidentially
bid beyond the “buy it now” threshold in order to not lose an auction,
and other irrational behavior).
on 18 Sep 2007 at 11:14 pm 3.Brendan said …
haha yes! i tried to play it with coworkers at lunch but they werent dumb enough :) i’d still play though.
on 20 Sep 2007 at 4:40 am 4.phil said …
great post!
check out thaler’s book ‘the winner’s curse’ for much more on the subject….