Abstract

In laboratory experiments, we compare the performance of short‐term and long‐term contracts in a two‐period supplier–buyer dyad with asymmetric cost information. We find that buyers tend to reject offers if the payoff inequality increases from one period to the next. We coin this dynamic form of inequity aversion as “ratcheting aversion.” We show that under short‐term contracting, the buyer's ratcheting aversion limits the supplier's leeway to exploit information revelation in earlier periods because suppliers fear contract rejections in later periods. As a result, the suppliers' empirical benefit of offering long‐term contracts over short‐term contracts is significantly larger than theory predicts. Furthermore, long‐term contracts enable supply chain partners to achieve less volatile supply chain performance than short‐term contracts because the buyers' ratcheting aversion leads to more contract rejections under short‐term contracting. While normative theory predicts that suppliers should include all future informational rents of the buyers in the first‐period offer, thereby creating large payoff differences between periods, we show that it can be behaviorally optimal for the supplier to make offers that lead to more equitable payoffs between periods.

Highlights

  • The selection of a supply contract is a critical decision faced by firms in a variety of industries

  • Consistent with Cooper et al (1999) and Brahm and Poblete (2017), we find that buyers reveal more information in period 1 than normative theory predicts

  • We introduce ratcheting aversion as a dynamic version of fairness preferences. It captures the disutility of individuals from an increase in payoff inequality from one period to the

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Summary

Introduction

The selection of a supply contract is a critical decision faced by firms in a variety of industries. One crucial contracting parameter is the contract term structure. Both short-term and long-term contracts are frequently applied in practice. General Motors and Alcan have signed a 10-year long-term contract for aluminum supply (Shi and Feng 2016). Hewlett and Packard spent 15% of their purchase expenses for commodities by using short-term contracts on spot markets in 2001 (Carbone 2001). The problem has generally been discussed in terms of a tradeoff between the flexibility offered by short-term contracts and the price uncertainty

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