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Deficit Reduction Through Diversity: How Affirmative Action at the FCC Increased Auction Competition

Peter Cramton, University of Maryland
Ian Ayres, Yale University

Abstract

In recent auctions for paging licenses, the Federal Communications Commission has granted businesses owned by minorities and women substantial bidding credits. In this article, Professors Ayres and Cramton analyze a particular auction and argue that the affirmative action bidding preferences, by increasing competition among auction participants, increased the government’s revenue by $45 million. Subsidizing the participation of new bidders can induce established bidders to bid more aggressively. The authors conclude that this revenue-enhancing effect does not provide a sufficient constitutional justification for affirmative action—but when such justification is independently present, affirmative actions can cost the government much less than is currently thought.

Suggested Citation

Peter Cramton and Ian Ayres. "Deficit Reduction Through Diversity: How Affirmative Action at the FCC Increased Auction Competition" Stanford Law Review 48 (1996): 761-815.
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/cramton/75