Transcript Game Theory
Game Theory
Topic 2
Simultaneous Games
“Loretta’s driving because I’m
drinking and I’m drinking
because she’s driving.”
- The Lockhorns
Review
Understanding the game
Noting if the rules are flexible
Anticipating our opponents’ reactions
Thinking one step ahead
Where does this lead us?
We’ve defined the “game” but not the outcome
2
Mike Shor
Equilibrium
The likely outcome of a game when rational,
strategic agents interact
Each player is playing his or her best strategy
given the strategy choices of all other players
No player has incentive to change his or her
action unilaterally
Outline:
Model interactions as games
Identify the equilibria
Decide when they are likely to occur
3
Mike Shor
Cigarette Advertising on TV
All US tobacco companies
advertised heavily on TV
1964 Surgeon General issues official warning
Cigarette smoking may be hazardous
Cigarette companies fear lawsuits
Government
may recover healthcare costs
1970 Companies strike agreement
Carry the warning label and cease
TV advertising in exchange for
immunity from federal lawsuits.
4
Mike Shor
Strategic Interaction
Players:
Strategies:
Payoffs:
Environment:
Reynolds and Philip Morris
Advertise or Not Advertise
Companies’ Profits
Each firm earns $50 million from its customers
Advertising costs a firm $20 million
Advertising captures $30 million from competitor
How to represent this game?
5
Mike Shor
Strategic Form of a Game
PLAYERS
Philip Morris
No Ad
Ad
No Ad
50 , 50
20 , 60
Ad
60 , 20
30 , 30
Reynolds
STRATEGIES
PAYOFFS
6
Mike Shor
What to Do?
Reynolds
No Ad
Ad
Philip Morris
No Ad
Ad
50 , 50
20 , 60
60 , 20
30 , 30
If you are advising Reynolds,
what strategy do you recommend?
7
Mike Shor
Best Replies
A strategy is a best reply to some
opponents’ strategy if it does at least
as well as any other strategy
si is a best reply to s-i if
ui (si , si ) ui (si, si )
for every si’
8
Mike Shor
Solving the Game
Reynolds
No Ad
Ad
Philip Morris
No Ad
Ad
50 , 50
20 , 60
60 , 20
30 , 30
Best reply for Reynolds:
If Philip Morris advertises:
If Philip Morris does not advertise:
9
Mike Shor
Dominance
A strategy is dominant if it outperforms
all other strategies no matter what
opposing players do
Games with dominant strategies
are easy to solve
No
need for “what if …” thinking
10
Mike Shor
Dominance
si strictly dominates si’ if
ui (si , si ) ui (si, si ) for every s-i
(the payoff is strictly higher for every
strategy of the other players)
si weakly dominates si’ if
ui (si , si ) ui (si, si ) for every s-i, and
ui (si , si ) ui (si, si ) for some s-i
11
Mike Shor
Dominance
A strategy si is strictly dominant if it
strictly dominates all other strategies
for that player
A strategy si is weakly dominant if it
weakly dominates all other strategies
for that player
12
Mike Shor
Dominance
Example 1
A
B
C
X
10
8
5
Y
20
18
5
Z
30
25
5
A strictly dominates B
&
A strictly dominates C
Therefore A is strictly dominant
13
Mike Shor
Dominance
Example 2
A
B
C’
X
10
8
10
Y
20
18
10
Z
30
25
10
A strictly dominates B
&
A weakly dominates C’
Therefore A is weakly dominant
14
Mike Shor
Dominance
Example 3
A
B
C’’
X
10
8
20
Y
20
18
20
Z
30
25
20
A strictly dominates B
&
A does not dominate C’’
Therefore A is not dominant
15
Mike Shor
Dominance
If you have a dominant strategy
(and no ability to agree on an alternate course of action)
use it.
If your opponent has a dominant strategy
(and no ability to agree on an alternate course of action)
then expect her to play it.
16
Mike Shor
Prisoner’s Dilemma
Optimal
No Ad
Ad
No Ad
50 , 50
60 , 20
Ad
20 , 60
30 , 30
Equilibrium
Both players have a dominant strategy
The equilibrium results in lower
payoffs for each player
17
Mike Shor
Prisoner’s Dilemma
s1
s2
Mike Shor
u11
s1
, u11
u21 , u12
u12
s2
, π21
u22 , π22
Both players have a dominant strategy (s1,s1)
u11 > u21
u12 > u22
The equilibrium results in lower
payoffs for each player
u22 > u11
The above two statements imply:
u12 > u22 > u11 > u21
18
Cigarette Advertising
After the 1970 agreement:
Cigarette advertising decreased by $63 million
Industry Profits rose by $91 million
19
Mike Shor
Prisoner’s Dilemma
The dominant strategy will be played
20
Mike Shor
Social Behavior in Pigs
Baldwin and Meese (1979), “Social Behavior in Pigs Studied by
Means of Operant Conditioning,” Animal Behavior
Two small pigs:
One small, one big:
Mike Shor
First pig gets 8 units of food, second gets 2
If simultaneous, each gets 5
Pushing the lever costs 1
If big pig is first, eats all of the food
If small pig is first, it gets 6 units of food
If simultaneous, big pig gets 7
21
Prisoner’s Dilemma
The dominant strategy will be played
Prisoner’s Dilemma
An
equilibrium is NOT necessarily efficient
Players can be forced to accept
mutually bad outcomes
Bad to be playing a prisoner’s dilemma,
but good to make others play
22
Mike Shor
How to Win a Bidding War
by Bidding Less?
The battle for Federated (1988)
Parent
of Bloomingdales
Current share price ≈ $60
Expected post-takeover share price ≈ $60
Macy’s offers $70/share
contingent on receiving 50% of the shares
Do you tender your shares to Macy’s?
23
Mike Shor
How to Win a Bidding War
(continued)
Robert Campeau bids $74 per share
not contingent on amount acquired
Campeau’s Mixed Scheme:
If
less than 50% tender their shares,
each receives:
$74 per share
If X>50% tender, each receives:
50%
X % 50%
$74
$60
X%
X%
24
Mike Shor
The Federated Game
Majority of Others
Macy’s
Campeau
You
Macy’s
$70
$60
Campeau
$74
$67+
To whom do you tender your shares?
25
Mike Shor
How to Win a Bidding War
Each player has a dominant strategy:
Tender shares to Campeau
Resulting Price:
(½ x 74) + (½ x 60) = $67
BUT: Macy’s offered $70 !
26
Mike Shor
Dominant Strategies
“ The biggest, looniest deal ever. ”
– Fortune Magazine, July 1988
on Campeau’s acquisition of Federated Stores
27
Mike Shor
Prisoner’s Dilemma Examples
Pricing by Firms
Divorce
Hire attorneys or proceed amicably?
Nuclear Weapons
High or low prices?
Value menus and loyalty programs
Build or don’t build weapons?
State governments
Inducements to attract business to a state
28
Mike Shor
Dominated Strategies
Two restaurants compete
Can
charge price of $30, $50, or $60
Customer base consists of
tourists and natives
600
tourists pick randomly
400 natives select the lowest price
Marginal costs are $10
29
Mike Shor
Tourists & Natives
Example scenario:
Restaurant
1: $50, Restaurant 2: $60
Restaurant
1 gets:
300 tourists + 400 natives
= 700 customers x
($50-$10) = $28K
Restaurant
2 gets:
300 tourists + 0 natives
= 300 customers x
($60-$10) = $15K
30
Mike Shor
Tourists & Natives
$30
R. 1 $50
$60
R. 2
$30
$50
$60
10 , 10 14 , 12 14 , 15
12 , 14 20 , 20 28 , 15
15 , 14 15 , 28 25 , 25
in thousands of dollars
31
Mike Shor
Dominance
A strategy si is strictly dominated if
some strategy si’ strictly dominates it
A strategy si is weakly dominated if
some strategy si’ weakly dominates it
32
Mike Shor
Iterated Deletion of
Strictly Dominated Strategies
Does any player have a
(strictly) dominated strategy?
Eliminate
the strictly dominated strategy
Reduce the size of the game
Repeat: Iterate the above procedure
33
Mike Shor
Iterated Deletion of
Dominated Strategies
R. 1
R. 2
$30
$50
$60
$30 10 , 10 14 , 12 14 , 15
$50 12 , 14 20 , 20 28 , 15
$60 15 , 14 15 , 28 25 , 25
34
Mike Shor
No Dominated Strategies
Often there are no dominated strategies
Some games may have multiple equilibria
Equilibrium selection becomes an issue
Method:
For each player, find the best response
to every strategy of the other player
35
Mike Shor
Equilibrium
An outcome in which every player is
playing a best response to the
strategies of all other players.
An equilibrium is a strategy profile s
such that si is a best reply to s-i for all i.
36
Mike Shor
Equilibrium Illustration
The Lockhorns
37
Mike Shor
Games of Coordination
Complements & technology adoption
Two complementing firms
Must use same technology,
but each firm has a preferred technology
Firm 2
Firm 1
A
A
100 , 50
B
0 ,
0
B
0 ,
0
50 , 100
Equilibrium does not offer a unique prediction
Commit (or go first) to win!
38
Mike Shor
Games of Assurance
Joint research ventures
Each firm may invest $50,000 into an R&D project
Project succeeds only if both invest
If successful, each nets $75,000
Firm 2
Firm 1
$50K
$0
$50K
75 , 75
$0
-50 ,
0
0 , -50
0 ,
0
39
Mike Shor
Games of Chicken
Entry into small markets
Firm 1
Stay
Swerve
Firm 2
Stay
Swerve
-50 , -50 100 , 0
0 , 100
50 , 50
40
Mike Shor
The Right Game to Play
Why do we “solve” games?
To know which one to play!
How
do internal corporate changes impact
the outcome of strategic interaction?
Some games are better than others
41
Mike Shor
Capacity Constraints
Can decreasing others’ added value
increase our profits?
Can decreasing total industry value
increase our profits?
42
Mike Shor
Multiple Equilibria
What is the predictive power of game theory
when there are multiple equilibria?
Sometimes
nothing ?
Refinements
Focal points
Efficiency
Evolutionary stability
Fairness
Risk dominance
43
Mike Shor
Summary
Games have predictable outcomes
Notice
dominant & dominated strategies
Select the right game to play
Looking ahead:
Sequential
Games:
How do games unfold over time?
44
Mike Shor