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Prisoner's dilemma

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Two suspects A, B are arrested by the police. The police have insufficient evidence for a conviction, ... Comptroller are arrested for Financial Reporting ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Prisoner's dilemma


1
Prisoner's dilemma
  • Two suspects A, B are arrested by the police.
  • The police have insufficient evidence for a
    conviction, and having separated both prisoners,
    visit each of them and offer the same deal
  • If one testifies for the prosecution (turns
    King's Evidence) against the other and the other
    remains silent, the silent accomplice receives
    the full 10-year sentence and the betrayer goes
    free.
  • If both stay silent, the police can only give
    both prisoners 6 months for a minor charge.
  • If both betray each other, they receive a 2-year
    sentence each.
  • This can be summarized

2
The Dilemma
  • Each prisoner has two options
  • to cooperate with his accomplice and stay quiet,
  • or to betray his accomplice and give evidence.
  • The outcome of each choice depends on the choice
    of the accomplice. However, neither prisoner
    knows the choice of his accomplice.
  • The optimal solution would be for both prisoners
    to cooperate with each other, as this would
    reduce the total jail time served by the group to
    one year total.
  • Any other decision would be worse for the two
    prisoners considered together. However by each
    following their individual interests, the two
    prisoners each receive a lengthy sentence.

3
Prisoner's dilemma (Corporate Setting)
  • Two officers of the corporation the CEO and the
    Comptroller are arrested for Financial Reporting
    fraud
  • The police have insufficient evidence for a
    conviction (they didnt take my course) and
    having separated both prisoners, visit each of
    them and offer the same deal
  • If one testifies for the prosecution against the
    other and the other remains silent, the silent
    accomplice receives the full 10-year sentence and
    the betrayer goes free.
  • If both stay silent, the police can only give
    both prisoners 6 months for a minor charge.
  • If both betray each other, they receive a 2-year
    sentence each.
  • This can be summarized

4
The Deal (another view)
  • Or stated differently
  • Here is how the deal will look to the CEO and the
    Comptroller

5
The Deal
  • Or stated differently
  • Here is how the deal will look to the CEO and the
    Comptroller

6
Why Ethics are Important!
  • The prisoner's dilemma is a type of non-zero-sum
    game
  • it is assumed that each individual player
    ("prisoner") is trying to maximize his own
    advantage, without concern for the well-being of
    the other players.
  • In Econo-speak The Nash equilibrium for this
    type of game does not lead to Pareto optimums
    (jointly optimum solutions)
  • Each side has an individual incentive to cheat
    even after promising to cooperate. This is the
    heart of the dilemma.
  • In the iterated prisoner's dilemma the game is
    played repeatedly.
  • Thus each player has an opportunity to "punish"
    the other player for previous non-cooperative
    play.
  • Cooperation may then arise as an equilibrium
    outcome.
  • The incentive to cheat may then be overcome by
    the threat of punishment, leading to the
    possibility of a superior, cooperative outcome.
  • As the number of iterations approach infinity,
    the Nash equilibrium tends to the Pareto Optimum,
    because when you face eternity the threat of
    grudges is a grave one indeed
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