English

Delegation in Veto Bargaining

Theoretical Economics 2022-12-29 v3

Abstract

A proposer requires the approval of a veto player to change a status quo. Preferences are single peaked. Proposer is uncertain about Vetoer's ideal point. We study Proposer's optimal mechanism without transfers. Vetoer is given a menu, or a delegation set, to choose from. The optimal delegation set balances the extent of Proposer's compromise with the risk of a veto. Under reasonable conditions, "full delegation" is optimal: Vetoer can choose any action between the status quo and Proposer's ideal action. This outcome largely nullifies Proposer's bargaining power; Vetoer frequently obtains her ideal point, and there is Pareto efficiency despite asymmetric information. More generally, we identify when "interval delegation" is optimal. Optimal interval delegation can be a Pareto improvement over cheap talk. We derive comparative statics. Vetoer receives less discretion when preferences are more likely to be aligned, by contrast to expertise-based delegation. Methodologically, our analysis handles stochastic mechanisms.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2006.06773,
  title  = {Delegation in Veto Bargaining},
  author = {Navin Kartik and Andreas Kleiner and Richard Van Weelden},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2006.06773},
  year   = {2022}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-23T16:15:15.450Z