nep-spo New Economics Papers
on Sports and Economics
Issue of 2023‒03‒27
three papers chosen by
Humberto Barreto
DePauw University

  1. Guest editorial: SBM Special Issue EURAM 2021 Conference - reshaping capitalism for a sustainable world - best papers from the Managing Sport SIG By Anna Gerke
  2. Unlocking the black box of sponsorship in participant-based sport By Konstantinos Koronios; Lazaros Ntasis; Panagiotis Dimitropoulos; Anna Gerke
  3. Information Favoritism and Scoring Bias in Contests By Shanglyu Deng; Hanming Fang; Qiang Fu; Zenan Wu

  1. By: Anna Gerke (Audencia Recherche - Audencia Business School)
    Date: 2022–09–19
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hal:journl:hal-03899086&r=spo
  2. By: Konstantinos Koronios (University of Peloponnese); Lazaros Ntasis (University of Peloponnese); Panagiotis Dimitropoulos (University of Peloponnese); Anna Gerke (Audencia Business School)
    Date: 2022–09–13
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hal:journl:hal-03924080&r=spo
  3. By: Shanglyu Deng (University of Maryland); Hanming Fang (University of Pennsylvania); Qiang Fu (National University of Singapore); Zenan Wu (Peking University)
    Abstract: Two potentially asymmetric players compete for a prize of common value, which is initially unknown, by exerting efforts. A designer has two instruments for contest design. First, she decides whether and how to disclose an informative signal of the prize value to players. Second, she sets the scoring rule of the contest, which varies the relative competitiveness of the players. We show that the optimum depends on the designer's objective. A bilateral symmetric contest - in which information is symmetrically distributed and the scoring bias is set to offset the initial asymmetry between players - always maximizes the expected total effort. However, the optimal contest may deliberately create bilateral asymmetry - which discloses the signal privately to one player, while favoring the other in terms of the scoring rule - when the designer is concerned about the expected winner's effort. The two instruments thus exhibit complementarity, in that the optimum can be made asymmetric in both dimensions even if the players are ex ante symmetric. Our results are qualitatively robust to (i) affiliated signals and (ii) endogenous information structure. We show that information favoritism can play a useful role in addressing affirmative action objectives.
    Keywords: All-pay Auction; Contest Design; Information Favoritism; Scoring Bias
    JEL: C72 D44 D82
    Date: 2023–03–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pen:papers:23-002&r=spo

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