Directional Learning and the Provisioning of Public Goods

Scientific Reports 5 (2015) 8010

7 Pages Posted: 27 Jan 2015

See all articles by Heinrich H. Nax

Heinrich H. Nax

ETH Zürich; University of Zurich

Matjaz Perc

Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, University of Maribor

Date Written: January 26, 2015

Abstract

We consider an environment where players are involved in a public goods game and must decide repeatedly whether to make an individual contribution or not. However, players lack strategically relevant information about the game and about the other players in the population. The resulting behavior of players is completely uncoupled from such information, and the individual strategy adjustment dynamics are driven only by reinforcement feedbacks from each player's own past. We show that the resulting ''directional learning'' is sufficient to explain cooperative deviations away from the Nash equilibrium. We introduce the concept of k-strong equilibria, which nest both the Nash equilibrium and the Aumann-strong equilibrium as two special cases, and we show that, together with the parameters of the learning model, the maximal k-strength of equilibrium determines the stationary distribution. The provisioning of public goods can be secured even under adverse conditions, as long as players are sufficiently responsive to the changes in their own payoffs and adjust their actions accordingly. Substantial levels of public cooperation can thus be explained without arguments involving selflessness or social preferences, solely on the basis of uncoordinated directional (mis)learning.

Keywords: public goods, cooperation, directional learning, k-strong equilibrium

JEL Classification: C7, D8, H4

Suggested Citation

Nax, Heinrich H. and Perc, Matjaz, Directional Learning and the Provisioning of Public Goods (January 26, 2015). Scientific Reports 5 (2015) 8010, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2555610

Heinrich H. Nax

ETH Zürich ( email )

Rämistrasse 101
ZUE F7
Zürich, 8092
Switzerland

University of Zurich ( email )

Rämistrasse 71
Zürich, CH-8006
Switzerland

Matjaz Perc (Contact Author)

Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, University of Maribor ( email )

Koroska cesta 160
Maribor, SI-2000
Slovenia

HOME PAGE: http://www.matjazperc.com/

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