An economist is analyzing two potential market scenarios for two competing firms. In each scenario, the firms must simultaneously choose a strategy. The text below shows the profits for each firm, (Firm 1, Firm 2), in millions of dollars based on their choices.
Scenario A:
- If Firm 1 chooses Up and Firm 2 chooses Left, payoffs are (10, 10).
- If Firm 1 chooses Up and Firm 2 chooses Right, payoffs are (8, 8).
- If Firm 1 chooses Down and Firm 2 chooses Left, payoffs are (5, 5).
- If Firm 1 chooses Down and Firm 2 chooses Right, payoffs are (2, 6).
Scenario B:
- If Firm 1 chooses Up and Firm 2 chooses Left, payoffs are (10, 5).
- If Firm 1 chooses Up and Firm 2 chooses Right, payoffs are (0, 0).
- If Firm 1 chooses Down and Firm 2 chooses Left, payoffs are (0, 0).
- If Firm 1 chooses Down and Firm 2 chooses Right, payoffs are (5, 10).
In which scenario can the economist predict the final outcome with a higher degree of confidence, and what is the reason for this increased confidence?
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Consider two strategic scenarios, Scenario X and Scenario Y.
- In Scenario X, a firm's profit-maximizing advertising budget is $1 million, regardless of whether its main competitor advertises heavily, moderately, or not at all.
- In Scenario Y, a different firm's profit-maximizing advertising budget is $1 million only if it correctly anticipates that its competitor will also spend $1 million on advertising. If the competitor chooses a different budget, the first firm's best response would change.
Assuming both scenarios result in a predictable outcome where both firms spend $1 million, why would an economist be more confident in predicting the outcome of Scenario X than Scenario Y?
Comparing Predictive Confidence in Strategic Scenarios
Assessing Predictive Confidence in Strategic Outcomes
In a strategic interaction between two firms, an outcome where Firm 1's chosen action is optimal only if it correctly anticipates Firm 2's action is just as reliable and predictable as an outcome where Firm 1's chosen action would have been optimal regardless of which action Firm 2 had chosen.
Predictive Certainty in Strategic Interactions
Analyze the following four strategic situations. Match each situation with the statement that best explains the reliability of predicting its outcome.
An economist is analyzing two potential market scenarios for two competing firms. In each scenario, the firms must simultaneously choose a strategy. The text below shows the profits for each firm, (Firm 1, Firm 2), in millions of dollars based on their choices.
Scenario A:
- If Firm 1 chooses Up and Firm 2 chooses Left, payoffs are (10, 10).
- If Firm 1 chooses Up and Firm 2 chooses Right, payoffs are (8, 8).
- If Firm 1 chooses Down and Firm 2 chooses Left, payoffs are (5, 5).
- If Firm 1 chooses Down and Firm 2 chooses Right, payoffs are (2, 6).
Scenario B:
- If Firm 1 chooses Up and Firm 2 chooses Left, payoffs are (10, 5).
- If Firm 1 chooses Up and Firm 2 chooses Right, payoffs are (0, 0).
- If Firm 1 chooses Down and Firm 2 chooses Left, payoffs are (0, 0).
- If Firm 1 chooses Down and Firm 2 chooses Right, payoffs are (5, 10).
In which scenario can the economist predict the final outcome with a higher degree of confidence, and what is the reason for this increased confidence?
Evaluating Analyst Predictions in a Strategic Game
Evaluating a Market Analyst's Claim
Evaluating Competing Market Predictions