Essay

Evaluating a Policy Intervention in a Public Goods Game

Consider a scenario with four farmers who can contribute to a shared irrigation project. A contribution costs an individual farmer $10. For each farmer who contributes, the crop yield for every farmer increases by $8. In this initial setup, not contributing is the dominant strategy for any individual farmer. A local policymaker, hoping to encourage contributions, proposes a $3 subsidy for each farmer who contributes, effectively reducing their personal cost to $7. Evaluate this policy. Will this subsidy be sufficient to change a farmer's dominant strategy from 'Not Contribute' to 'Contribute'? Justify your conclusion by analyzing the farmer's net payoff.

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Updated 2025-08-12

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