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Author(s)

Nabil Al-Najjar

Robert Gary-Bobo

A group of experts with different prior beliefs must make a collective decision over the choice of a treatment or policy. We propose a model where such disagreements are resolved through bargaining. We show that, when the outcome is determined according to the Nash bargaining solution, the collective decision is made as if a planner maximized expected utility with respect to a ``compromise belief'' that places greater weight on the more pessimistic experts. In interesting classes of environments, bargaining leads to an inefficient use of information in a strong sense: experts receive a lower payoff in every state, and thus for any prior belief. This inefficiency takes the form of under-reaction to information. We connect these findings to speculative betting and to the admissibility of statistical decision procedures.
Date Published: 2023
Citations: Al-Najjar, Nabil, Robert Gary-Bobo. 2023. Bargaining over Treatment Choice under Disagreement. American Economic Journal: Microeconomics. 387-425.