Pest Control Game as a Model for Real-World Social Dilemmas
The hypothetical pest control game serves as a practical model for understanding common real-world social dilemmas. It effectively illustrates situations where the independent actions of individuals can have significant consequences, whether beneficial or harmful, for their neighbors, thereby highlighting the conflict between personal incentives and collective wellbeing.
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Economics
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Social Science
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CORE Econ
Ch.4 Strategic interactions and social dilemmas - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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The Farmers' Payoff Dilemma
Consider a situation involving two neighboring farmers who must independently decide whether to use an inexpensive but polluting pesticide or a more expensive, environmentally-friendly one. The polluting pesticide contaminates a shared water source. If both farmers choose the polluting pesticide, they both end up with lower profits than if they had both chosen the friendly one. Why is it likely that both farmers will end up choosing the polluting pesticide?
In a situation where two individuals must independently choose an action, and each person's choice affects the other's outcome, the most beneficial result for the group is achieved when each individual selects the option that maximizes their own personal gain, regardless of the other's choice.
Individual Incentives vs. Group Outcomes
Two competing firms, Firm A and Firm B, sell an identical product. They must independently decide whether to set a 'High Price' or a 'Low Price'. If both set a High Price, they both earn a large profit. If both set a Low Price, they both earn a small profit. If one sets a Low Price while the other sets a High Price, the Low-Price firm captures the entire market and earns a very large profit, while the High-Price firm earns nothing. For each firm, setting a Low Price is the best strategy for itself, no matter what the other firm does.
Based on this scenario, match each term to its corresponding description.
The Paradox of Self-Interest
Two roommates must independently decide whether to spend an hour cleaning their shared kitchen or not. If both clean, they both enjoy a very pleasant kitchen. If only one cleans, that person bears the full cost of cleaning while the other enjoys a clean kitchen for free (the best outcome for the non-cleaner). If neither cleans, the kitchen becomes unlivable, which is the worst outcome for both. For each individual, the best personal choice, regardless of what the other does, is to not clean. What is the most likely outcome of this situation?
Two neighboring farms share a common groundwater source. Each farmer must decide independently whether to use a cheap, water-intensive irrigation method or an expensive, water-conserving one. If both conserve, the water level remains stable, and they both achieve sustainable, moderate profits. If both use the intensive method, the water level drops significantly, increasing their pumping costs and leading to low profits for both. However, if one farmer uses the intensive method while the other conserves, the intensive user gets very high profits, while the conserver's profits plummet. The most likely outcome is that both farmers use the intensive method. Why is this outcome considered economically inefficient?
The Advertising Dilemma
Two competing online retailers, 'ShopFast' and 'BuyQuick', share a common digital marketplace platform. They must independently decide whether to invest in an expensive, advanced anti-fraud system that protects the entire platform. The table shows the potential profits (in millions) for each company based on their decisions.
BuyQuick Invests BuyQuick Doesn't Invest ShopFast Invests ShopFast: $5M, BuyQuick: $5M ShopFast: $1M, BuyQuick: $8M ShopFast Doesn't Invest ShopFast: $8M, BuyQuick: $1M ShopFast: $2M, BuyQuick: $2M A consultant argues, 'From a purely collective standpoint, the best possible outcome is for both companies to invest.' Which statement best evaluates the consultant's claim?
Negotiation as a Solution to Social and Economic Problems
The Social Dilemma of Shared Irrigation Systems
Pest Control Game as a Model for Real-World Social Dilemmas
Learn After
The Social Dilemma of Shared Irrigation Systems
Two neighboring farms share a common groundwater source for irrigation. Each farmer must independently decide whether to conserve water or to extract an excessive amount for a higher crop yield this season. If both conserve, the water level remains stable, and both farms can operate profitably for years. If one farmer extracts excessively while the other conserves, the first farmer earns a large immediate profit, but the shared water level drops, harming the other farmer. If both extract excessively, the groundwater is depleted rapidly, leading to severe water shortages and crop failure for both in the near future. Which statement best analyzes why this situation represents a social dilemma?
The Group Project Dilemma
Analyzing Public Park Maintenance as a Social Dilemma
A community of fishers shares a lake. Each fisher can choose to limit their catch to a sustainable level or to catch as many fish as possible for maximum immediate profit. Analyze this scenario by matching each abstract concept from a social dilemma model with its corresponding description in this specific situation.
Analyzing Traffic Congestion as a Social Dilemma
A city government offers a large tax rebate to any household that installs solar panels, aiming to reduce the city's overall carbon footprint. This program is costly for the city. A resident might reason that their individual contribution is negligible to the city's total emissions, but they will still benefit from any collective improvement in air quality.
Statement: The tax rebate completely eliminates the social dilemma in this situation by perfectly aligning each individual's self-interest with the community's best interest.
The Antibiotic Prescription Dilemma
Two roommates share a kitchen. Both prefer a clean kitchen, but cleaning requires time and effort that each would prefer to avoid. If one cleans, both benefit. If neither cleans, the kitchen becomes unusable for both. They are considering different ways to ensure the kitchen stays clean. Based on the principles of resolving conflicts between individual incentives and collective well-being, which of the following strategies is LEAST likely to be effective in the long term?
Designing a Social Dilemma Scenario
The Community Vaccination Decision