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Public Goods and Social Contracts Karl Sigmund University of Vienna and IIASA, Laxenburg
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Public Goods and Social Contracts

Feb 24, 2016

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Public Goods and Social Contracts. Karl Sigmund University of Vienna and IIASA, Laxenburg. Evolutionary games with cultural transmission. Simple cases. Prisoner‘s Dilemma . Example : Mutual A id Game . Example : Mutual A id Game . Mutual A id G ame. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Public Goods and Social ContractsKarl Sigmund

University of Vienna and IIASA, Laxenburg

Page 2: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Evolutionary games with cultural transmission

)y probabilit some(with exploring andcopying) prefential (i.e., learning,by

strategies of updating),...,( payoff

)...with ( sfrequencie,...,1 strategies

constant size population

1

1

nii

ni

XXPPXXMX

niM

Page 3: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Simple cases

payoffhigher ith strategy w toalwaysswitch :selection Strong (B)

simplex)unit on equation replicator(),...,(for dynamics ticdeterminis

s.t.

:population Infinite (A)

1 nn

ii

xxx

xMXM

Page 4: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Prisoner‘s Dilemma

D)percent 100on distributiy (stationarselection strongfor (B))0 coops of (freq. population infinitefor (A)

toleads always learning Social

t don' :defect) (to )(with cost own at

player-co to donate :cooperate) (to

AllD

DcbcbC

Page 5: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Example: Mutual Aid Game

Page 6: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Example: Mutual Aid Game

Dilemma Socialbetter do riders freebut )1( payoff ,contribute all if

11 rs)(cooperato rscontributo

1earn s)(exploiter freeriders

)(t don' ,contribute players players 1 among divided

1by multipliedon contributinotor 0 contribute

)2(with size of groups

cr

cmmrc

mmrc

mmmmmotherm

rc

mMm

C

C

DCDC

Page 7: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Mutual Aid Game

• For 2-player groups, PD gameReciprocation helps (sometimes) to overcome the social dilemma

• But what if more than 2 players?

• Many economic experiments in game labs

Page 8: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Herrmann, Thöni,Gächter (Nature 2009)

Page 9: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Peer Punishment (self-justice)

Players can impose fine After every round(at an own cost )

leverage

Page 10: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Fehr and Gächter (Nature 2002)

Page 11: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Costly Peer Punishment

To be a punisher is costlyOpportunity for second-order free-riders (who contribute to Mutual Aid, but not to punishment) They do better than punishers if free-riders around (and equally well if not)

Page 12: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Peer Punishment vanishes

Infinite population

Strong selectionStationary distribution:100 percent freeriders

Page 13: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Peer Punishment vanishes

Page 14: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Optional Mutual Aid Game

Page 15: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Optional Mutual Aid Game

Page 16: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Optional Mutual Aid

Page 17: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Optional Public Good game

Page 18: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Optional, with peer punishment

catalyzers tsparticipan-non win!punisherspeer

riders freeorder -second and

riders, free ts,participan-non offrequency 8

2

punishers offrequency 82

ondistributi stationaryselection Strong

M

MM

Page 19: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Peer Punishment

Page 20: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Peer Punishment

Page 21: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Voluntary vs Compulsory Games

Page 22: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Peer punishment?

Reputation effects (Hauert, Hilbe, Barclay)Consensus (Boyd, Gintis, Ertan, Puttermann…)Asocial punishment (Herrmann, Gächter, Nikiforakis…)Hardly any second order punishmentLittle peer punishment of free riders (Guala)

Page 23: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Peer punishment?

Counter-punishment, asocial punishment

John Locke (Two treatises on government, 1689):‚…resistance (by defaulters) many times makes the punishment dangerous, and frequently destructive, to those who attempt it‘.

Page 24: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Pool punishment

Sanctioning institution replaces self-justiceYamagishi (1986):Players contribute to punishment fundsbefore the Mutual Aid game Defectors pay fine Bistability if compulsory

Page 25: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Optional Pool Punishment

Page 26: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Optional Pool Punishment

punisherspercent 100punishmentorder second and optional, If

)1,2,2,2(71on distributi stationary

punishmentorder first only and optional, If

freeriderspercent 100 ,compulsory is game if

:selection strongfor on distributi Stationary

Page 27: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Competition of pool with peer

Second order free riders,

Free riders,Non-participants,Peer punisherPool punisher:without second orderpunishmentstationary distribution

Page 28: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Competition of pool with peer

efficiency vs.Stability

Page 29: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Without or with second order punishment

Sigmund, DeSilva,Hauert,Traulsen (Nature 2010)

Page 30: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Mutual coercion, mutually agreed

Whether in conditions of anarchy (peer punishment, i.e. self-justice)Or if institutions provide the sanctions,voluntary participation promotes cooperation

self-committment

No rational deliberation, just social learning

Page 31: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Du Contrat Social

Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778)

‚L‘homme est né libre, et les hommes sont partout dans les fers.‘

Page 32: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Experiments?

Experimental Economics (2013)

The evolution of sanctioning institutions. An experimental approach to the social contract

(with Boyu Zhang, Cong Li, Hannelore DeSilva,Peter Bednarik)

Page 33: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Traulsen, Röhl, Milinski (Proc. Royal Soc. B, 2012)Kamei, Putterman, Tyran (preprint 2011)Markussen, Putterman, Tyran (preprint 2011)

‚Formal‘ vs. ‚Informal‘ sanctions

Other experiments on Peer vs Pool

Page 34: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

On offer: Peer Punishment

• Players see number of freeriders• Can decide: Punish freerider? It costs a punisher 0.5 MU (Monetary units) to substract 1 MU from a freerider

Page 35: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

On offer: Pool PunishmentAlternatives:• Contribute nothing (Freerider)

• Contribute 1 MU to Mutual Aid Game (2nd order free rider)

• Contribute 1 MU to Mutual Aid Game AND 0.5 MU to Punishment Pool (punisher)

(for each 0.5 to Punishment Pool, each freerider is fined 1 MU)

Two versions:First and second order punishment

Page 36: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

25 practice rounds

• 5 rounds (a) Mutual Aid without punishment• 5 rounds (b) Mutual Aid with peer punishment• 5 rounds (c) Mutual Aid with pool punishment• 10 rounds full game: choice between (a),(b),(c) and

(d) (no participation)

Page 37: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

50 rounds experiment

9 groups of 12-14 play first-order version9 groups of 12-14 play second-order version

Page 38: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

50 rounds experiment

9 groups of 12-14 play first-order version9 groups of 12-14 play second-order version

6 end up with peer regime: 3 from each version6 end up with pool regime: all second-order

Page 39: Public  Goods and Social Contracts
Page 40: Public  Goods and Social Contracts
Page 41: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Parallel histories

Page 42: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Time evolution

Page 43: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Contribution to Mutual Aid

Page 44: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Social learning of social contract

• Decisions to switch: 70 percent to higher payoff

• Decisions NOT to switch: 76 percent had optimal payoff

• After optimal payoff: 81 percent do not switch

Page 45: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Social learning of social contract

‚social learner‘ if at least 90 percent of decisions can be explained as switching towards higher payoff, or sticking with optimal payoff

• 80 percent of players social learners

Page 46: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Sanctioning institutions

Page 47: Public  Goods and Social Contracts

Self-domestication?

Blumenbach (1752-1840):Humans as ‚the most perfect domestic animal‘

Konrad Lorenz (1903-1989) ‚Verhausschweinung‘

(Fat belly, soft skin, neoteny, infantility)