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Monetary and Non-Monetary Payoffs
While payoffs in game theory are often represented by monetary values like profit or income for simplicity, they can also represent non-monetary benefits or utility. This can include measures of satisfaction, happiness, reputation, or any other subjective value a player assigns to an outcome. For example, a player's payoff could be measured in 'utils' representing their level of enjoyment.
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Economics
Economy
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Hypothetical Outcomes (Payoffs) in a Game Table
Representing a Game with a Payoff Matrix
Allocation (in Economics)
Uncertainty of Payoffs in Strategic Interactions
Monetary vs. Non-Monetary Payoffs
Relationship between Strategies, Outcomes, and Payoffs
Interdependence of Payoffs in Strategic Interactions
Interdependence of Payoffs
Monetary and Non-Monetary Payoffs
Identifying Payoffs in a Strategic Scenario
Two competing coffee shops, 'Bean Haven' and 'Espresso Express,' are located on the same street. Each shop must independently decide whether to lower its prices for the upcoming week. The final weekly profit for Bean Haven is considered its 'payoff.' What is this payoff determined by?
A farmer is deciding how to allocate their time between leisure and working in their field to produce grain. At their current allocation, the farmer is willing to give up 2 kilograms of grain for one additional hour of leisure. However, if they were to work that additional hour instead of taking it as leisure, they could produce 5 kilograms of grain. Based on this situation, which of the following statements is correct?
Group Project Payoffs
Two candidates, Candidate A and Candidate B, are in a close political race. Each must decide whether to run a positive campaign focusing on their own policies or a negative campaign attacking their opponent. For Candidate A, the primary goal is to win the election, but they also strongly value maintaining a public reputation for integrity. Which of the following best represents Candidate A's 'payoff' in this strategic situation?
Determining Payoffs in a Business Scenario
A company is deciding whether to launch an expensive advertising campaign. The company's final profit from this decision depends solely on whether they choose to launch the campaign or not.
Two roommates, Alex and Ben, must independently decide whether to spend their Saturday cleaning their shared apartment. Alex's satisfaction level, which represents his personal benefit from each situation, varies depending on what both he and Ben decide to do. Match each combination of actions with Alex's resulting satisfaction (payoff).
Evaluating Business Payoffs
The Interdependent Nature of Outcomes
Utility
Critiquing a Payoff Analysis