Generic catastrophic poverty when selfish investors exploit a
degradable common resource
Game theory deals with situations in which a number of
agents compete with each other, with each participant trying to
maximize his or her own profit individually. One speaks of a
"Nash equilibrium" if players cannot increase their returns
further. The "Tragedy of the Commons" is a game theoretical
scenario in which the actors do not compete directly, but
indirectly: If someone takes a piece of a common pie, there will
be less for everybody else.
Instead of investigating how to avoid the "Tragedy of the
Commons," Claudius Gros from Goethe University's Institute for
Theoretical Physics examined the resulting Nash equilibrium,
with unexpected results: If a common good is divided more or
less equally among N interested parties, then each receives a
share of the order 1/N. However, the respective investment costs
still need to be deducted.
Gros' calculations show that, in equilibrium, the actors
increase their engagement until the resulting investment costs
almost reach the value of the resources the individual investor
can secure for her- or himself. Mathematically, the theoretical physicist was able to show that the final profit of the individual
investor scales as 1/N2.
The original expectation, that investors each receive a
proportional share from the resource, remains correct, as Gros'
research shows. However, this does not translate into an overall
return of the same proportion, which is smaller by a power in the
number of investors. Gros denotes the dramatic deterioration of
the net profit as "catastrophic poverty," as it implies that
unregulated competition drives the individual actor close to the
profitability limit, viz to the subsistence level.
Similarly, Gros was able to show that catastrophic poverty
can be avoided when the actors cooperate with each other.
Cooperation leads to a net profit corresponding to the number of
investors in simple power, the classical result.
The result of the investigations is therefore that the "Tragedy
of the Commons" can cause substantially more damage than
previously assumed. Uncontrolled access not only leads to a
potentially excessive exploitation of the resource, a topic that has
been the focus of many previous studies. In addition, investors
suffer themselves when only maximizing their own profits.
GROS, Claudius. Generic catastrophic poverty when selfish
investors exploita degradable common resource. Royal Society
Open Science (online), 08 Fev. 2023 (adaptado)
De acordo com o texto, a "Tragédia dos Comuns" pode ser
definida como
Incorreta. Gabarito oficial da banca:
Veja como esse erro impacta seu desempenho geral. Ver estatísticas