Distributive Bargaining

Chris Honeyman
President, CONVENOR
Director, Broad Field Project


Definition:

Distributive bargaining is bargaining in which whatever one party stands to gain, the other must give up.

Users:

Virtually everyone is a user of this concept.

Description:

Distributive bargaining is the most basic form of negotiation, in which the interests or intent of each party are irrelevant, there is no way to "expand the pie," and neither party is interested in doing anything in particular to prolong or improve the relationship. Many types of negotiation include distributive elements, even when they are more complex. Thus in labor negotiations, even while the parties may work very hard to design contract language governing vacations, seniority, and job promotions that satisfy both parties' needs and interests, when it comes to the wage portion of the bargaining each party may assume that whatever the union gains, the employer will have to give up, and treat this part of the negotiation as a classic distributive bargaining. In other settings, unsophisticated negotiators tend to assume that all negotiation is distributive, and to miss cues that would allow both parties to come out of the deal with more.

Example:

An American tourist goes shopping for a rug while on vacation in Istanbul. This kind of negotiation is usually thought of as a classic distributive bargain: the tourist and the rug merchant have no previous relationship and will probably never see each other again, and there are no posted prices in the shop. Haggling produces either a simple agreement on a price, or an "agreement to disagree" on the price such that the consumer walks away and shops elsewhere. And whatever additional money the merchant gets, the consumer gives up.

But consider the possibility of other elements — a rug merchant who would like to do more business by mail and Web site in the tourist's hometown of Detroit, or the tourist's interest in buying more than one rug over a period of time, however, and the picture potentially changes to an "integrative" negotiation in which many more things are at stake than a single price for a single purchase.

Application:

Distributive bargaining is so common that it is an everyday type of transaction, second only to fixed price "take it or leave it" transactions such as the price on a can of beans in a supermarket. Because it is so common and because (in the U.S.) everyone grows up with it, it contains a trap — people tend to believe it is the only way of reaching an agreement on terms. However, in many (but certainly not all) instances, integrative bargaining can actually yield a superior result.

Links to Related Articles:
Integrative Bargaining
Negotiation

 
CRInfo Version VI
Copyright © 1999-2007 The Conflict Resolution Information Source
CRInfo™ is a Registered Trademark of the University of Colorado

Project Acknowledgements

The Conflict Resolution Information Source
Guy Burgess and Heidi Burgess, Co-Directors
c/o Conflict Information Consortium (Formerly Conflict Research Consortium), University of Colorado
Campus Box 580, Boulder, CO 80309
Phone: (303) 492-1635; Fax: (303) 492-2154; Contact

University of Colorado at Boulder
For it isn't enough to talk about peace. One must believe in it. And it isn't enough to believe in it. One must work at it. -- Eleanor Roosevelt

Featured Links
Organizations Making Noteworthy Contributions to Conflict Resolution and Peace:
Respond
Respond


Partner Projects
CRInfo mini-grant recipients, gateway partners, and affiliated projects:
Intractable Conflict Knowledge Base Project
Intractable Conflict Knowledge Base Project

"This knowledge base examines very difficult, destructive, long-lasting conflicts. We explore what makes these conflicts different from other conflicts, and more importantly what can be done to lessen their destructiveness and make them more constructive."

Medecins Sans Frontieres
Medecins Sans Frontieres

1999 Nobel Peace Laureate; also known as Doctors Without Borders