Strategic Business Decisions
Analyze the following scenario. Based on a model where each business owner acts solely to maximize their own immediate profit without coordinating with the other, predict the most likely outcome and explain the reasoning behind it.
0
1
Tags
Library Science
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Ch.4 Strategic interactions and social dilemmas - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Interdisciplinary Applications of Game Theory
Best Response (in Game Theory)
Equilibrium (in a Model)
Setup for the Adam and Bella Entertainment Choice Game
Advancement of Game Theory through Nash's Work
Strategic Interaction
Enhancing Game-Theoretic Models to Account for Cooperative Behavior
Self-Interest in Economic Models
Homo Economicus
Foundational Importance of Game Theory and Nash Equilibrium for Economic Modeling
Definition of Social Dilemma
Definition of Social Interaction
John Nash
Analyze each of the following scenarios. Match each scenario with the type of social outcome that is most likely to result from the self-interested actions of the individuals involved.
Strategic Business Decisions
The Coffee Shop Dilemma
Analyzing US Financial Fragility
Two competing coffee shops, 'The Daily Grind' and 'Espresso Yourself', are located across the street from each other. Each must independently decide whether to lower their prices. The table below shows the daily profit each shop can expect based on their combined decisions. The first number in each cell is the profit for The Daily Grind, and the second is for Espresso Yourself.
Espresso Yourself: Keep Price High Espresso Yourself: Lower Price The Daily Grind: Keep Price High $500, $500 $200, $600 The Daily Grind: Lower Price $600, $200 $300, $300 Assuming both shops act in their own immediate self-interest to maximize their own profit, what is the most likely outcome of this situation?
The Farmers' Irrigation Dilemma
A social interaction, where each individual's decisions affect the outcomes of others, will always result in a worse outcome for everyone involved when each person acts solely in their own self-interest.
A small city's transportation market for on-demand rides is dominated by a single taxi company that owns all the operating licenses, resulting in high prices and long wait times for consumers. A new city council wants to introduce policies to make this market more competitive. Arrange the following potential policy changes in order from the one that would MOST increase competition to the one that would LEAST increase competition.
Resolving a Shared Resource Dilemma
Non-Social Interactions in Economic Models
The Anil and Bala Crop Choice Scenario as a Game
An economist is building a formal model to predict the outcome of a wage negotiation between a labor union and a company's management. To effectively model this as a strategic interaction, which of the following elements is LEAST critical to define as a core component of the model's basic structure?