Learn Before
Public Good Game
A public good game is a strategic interaction in which individual players can take an action that is personally costly but produces benefits for all players, including themselves. This structure inherently creates a social dilemma because each player has an incentive to free-ride on the contributions of others.
0
1
Tags
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Economy
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.4 Strategic interactions and social dilemmas - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
Definition of a Free-Rider
Example of Social Dilemma: Shared Household Chores
Example of Social Dilemma: Student Group Projects
Historical Persistence of Social Dilemmas
Climate Change as an Unresolved Social Dilemma
Public Good Game
Ostrom's Research on the Challenge of Common-Pool Resources
Pest Control as a Social Dilemma
Climate Change as a Global-Scale Cooperation Problem
Transformation of Fish Stocks from a Public Good to a Rival Resource
Overgrazing as an Application of the 'Tragedy of the Commons'
Community Management as a Solution to the 'Tragedy of the Commons'
Overexploitation of Fisheries as an Example of the Tragedy of the Commons
Individual Action to Reduce Carbon Footprint
Analyzing a Shared Resource Dilemma
A community of fishers operates in a large, open-access lake. To maximize their personal income, each fisher decides to use nets with very small mesh sizes, which catch both mature and juvenile fish. Initially, this practice increases individual profits. However, after several seasons, the total fish population in the lake collapses, and all the fishers find their catches dramatically reduced. Which statement best analyzes the economic dynamic that leads to this outcome?
Evaluating a Solution to Resource Overuse
The 'Tragedy of the Commons' occurs primarily because individuals using a shared resource are acting irrationally and with the specific intent to deplete the resource for others.
Applying the Tragedy of the Commons
A group of herders shares a common pasture. Each herder individually decides it is in their best interest to add more animals to their personal herd, as they receive the full benefit from their own animals while the cost of slightly reduced grazing quality is shared among all herders. This leads to the pasture becoming overgrazed and unable to support any of the herds. Match each element of this scenario to the corresponding theoretical component of the 'Tragedy of the Commons'.
Arrange the following events in the logical sequence that illustrates the process described as the 'Tragedy of the Commons'.
The 'Tragedy of the Commons' describes a situation where the depletion of a shared resource is likely because the full ______ cost of an individual's increased use is not borne by that individual alone, but is instead distributed among all users.
Evaluating Policy Solutions for a Common-Pool Resource
Which of the following scenarios is the LEAST likely to be described as a 'Tragedy of the Commons'?
Key Observed Patterns in the Worldwide Public Good Game
The Social Dilemma of Shared Irrigation Systems
Altruism as a Solution to Social Dilemmas
Learn After
The Irrigation Game as an Example of a Public Good Game
Workplace Group Project as a Social Dilemma
Sustaining Cooperation in Repeated Public Good Games via Peer Punishment
Experiencing Economics Ebook: Classroom Public Good Game
Social Dilemmas and Inefficient Market Provision of Public Goods
Free-Riding in Public Good Games
Factors Supporting High Contributions to Public Goods
Community Project Incentive Analysis
In a two-person economy, Person A is forced to work 12 hours a day to produce 20 bushels of wheat. Person B, who enforces this arrangement, takes 19 bushels and leaves Person A with 1 bushel, which is just enough to survive. Given the production possibilities, it is impossible to produce more than 20 bushels with 12 hours of work. Which statement accurately analyzes this allocation?
Four students are assigned to create a shared online study guide for an exam. The final guide will be accessible to all four, regardless of who contributes. Each student must decide independently whether to spend several hours creating high-quality content (a personal cost) or to do nothing and hope others complete the work. If each student acts solely to maximize their own personal benefit (getting a good study guide with the least personal effort), what is the most probable outcome of this situation?
Neighborhood Watch Dilemma
Three roommates share a kitchen. Each roommate independently decides whether to spend an hour cleaning it. The personal cost of cleaning is valued at $6. If at least one person cleans, each of the three roommates receives a benefit equivalent to $5 from having a clean kitchen. If you are one of the roommates and you decide to clean while the other two do not, what is your individual net payoff?
In a one-time strategic interaction where each participant can choose to pay a personal cost to create a larger collective benefit for the entire group, the most predictable outcome is that the collective benefit will be maximized because each rational individual understands that cooperation is best for the group as a whole.
Analyzing the Core Conflict in a Public Good Game
Consider a one-time interaction involving four people. Each person can choose to contribute $10 to a group project. For every $10 contributed, the total value of the project increases by $16, and this total value is then divided equally among all four participants, regardless of who contributed. From the perspective of a single, rational individual focused only on maximizing their own financial outcome, which of the following statements best analyzes their decision?
Evaluating Fundraising Strategies for a Public Park
Social Norms as a Driver of Conditional Cooperation in Public Good Games
In a scenario where individuals can pay a personal cost to create a shared benefit for a group, match each key concept to its correct description.