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Experiment #4: OPEC Oil ProductionIn this experiment, you will be playing the role of one of the main member countries in OPEC. These countries correspond roughly to Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, Venezuela, and Nigeria. There is also production by the rest of the world (ROW). In each period, each of the member countries of OPEC choose their quantities. ROW chooses its quantity as a price taker in response to the price on the world market. The OPEC members may attempt to form a cartel and agree upon production quotas; however, there is no punishment mechanism (other than economic punishments through the oil market) for failure to adhere to the quotas. ROW never participates in the cartel and acts passively as a price taker. As usual, your goal is to maximize total profit over the course of the game.The experiment lasts for a random number of periods described below. In each period, a country must choose how much oil to produce for sale on the world market. The world market price adjusts (approximately) to clear the market given total production by OPEC and ROW. All information on production and costs are publicly available on the spreadsheet located in the handouts section of the course website. The actual production decisions made by each country are not public information. Players only see the price on the world market and the approximate world oil production. Countries: To determine what country each team will represent, we will hold an open outcry auction with a minimum opening bid of $100 million. Your bid amount is deducted from profits accrued during the game to yield a net profit (or loss) figure for thegame. Since there are 14 teams in the class, we will have two “markets” (labeled market A and market B) consisting of the seven member countries in each market. The markets are completely separate and do not interact with one another in any way. The countries will be auctioned off in order of production capacity. Thus, Saudi Arabia in market A will be auctioned first, followed by Saudi B, and so on.Demand: Estimates of world demand for oil are also given in the spreadsheet. This information also includes an estimate of the supply curve of ROW in response to world oil prices. This information is believed to be quite accurate. The demand for oil is not expected to change over the course of the experiment. Costs: The only costs a country incurs in producing oil are the marginal costs of extraction. These costs are delineated in the spreadsheet. Inventory: Because the world price of oil is set in dollar increments, it is possible that a country will not sell exactly the quantity produced in the period. If not, the residual is held at no additional cost in inventory for sale the next period (if there is one). Note: In practice, inventory amounts are trivial and can be safely ignored.Profits: Per period profits are the difference between revenues and costs. Overall profits are the sum of per period profits less the cost of purchasing the country in the auction.End of game: The game is certain to last for 8 periods. Prior to the start of period 9, thereis a 10% chance that an important technological discovery (cold fusion) will wipe out all the economic rents from oil production. Prior to the start of period 10, if the game goes that far, the chance of a breakthrough increases to 50% per period and remains at that level in perpetuity. Logistics: During the in-class rounds of the game, you will submit your quantities in a sealed envelope to the “market maker”. For out of class periods, submit quantities by sending an e-mail to me.Mediator: Since there are only 14 countries available for auction, one team will not receive any country. Instead, that team will select a market for which it will act as a mediator. The mediator receives 5% of the profits from oil sales in the market. (Note that this payment will not be deducted from any of the countries in the mediated market. It is a bonus over those amounts.) The job of the mediator is to try to broker deals to sustain price discipline in the


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