Abstract

We report experiments on how players select among multiple Pareto-ranked equilibria in a coordination game. Subjects initially choose inefficient equilibria. Charging a fee to play (which makes initial equilibria money-losing) creates coordination on better equilibria. When fees are optional, improved coordination is consistent with forward induction. But coordination improves even when subjects must pay the fee (forward induction does not apply). Subjects appear to use a loss-avoidance selection principle: they expect others to avoid strategies that always result in losses. Loss-avoidance implies that mental accounting of outcomes can affect choices in games.

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