This paper proposes an experimental approach to studying different aspects of discrimination. We let participants play various games with opponents of distinct ethnic affiliation. Strategies based upon such ethnic affiliation provide direct evidence of ethnic discrimination. This approach was utilized to study ethnic discrimination in Israeli Jewish society. Using the "trust game," we detected a systematic mistrust toward men of Eastern origin. A "dictator game" experiment indicated that this discrimination was due to (mistaken) ethnic stereotypes and not to a "taste for discrimination." The "ultimatum game" enabled us to trace another ethnic stereotype that reversed the discrimination's direction. One of the surprising results is that this ethnic discrimination is an entirely male phenomenon.
We study duopolistic competition in a homogeneous good through time under the assumption that its current desirability is an exponentially weighted function of accumulated. past consumption. This implies that-the current price of the good does not decline by as much to accommodate any given level of current consumption as it would if its desirability were a function solely of present consumption. We analyze the consequences of this "stickiness" of the good's current price through a speed of adjustment parameter that yields instantaneous adjustment as a limiting case. Our analysis is conducted in terms of a differential game. The open-loop a n d closed-loop Nash equilibrium strategies are derived, from which the corresponding asymptotically stable steady-state equilibrium prices for the good are obtained. These equilibrium prices are then analyzed as the speed of price adjustment becomes instantaneous. It is found that the equilibrium price corresponding to the open-loop Nash equilibrium strategies approaches the static Cournot equilibrium price while the equilibrium price corresponding to the close-loop Nash equilibrium strategies, which are subgame perfect, approaches a price below it. KEYWOKDS: Sticky prices, open-loop Nash equilibrium strategies, closed-loop Nash equilibrium strategies, asymptotically stable steady-state equilibrium prices, speed of adjustment, limit game. ' We would like to thank the members of the workshop at the Institute of Advanced Studies in Jerusalem, Israel, David Kreps, a n d two anonymous referees for many helpful comments.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.