In Support of Trigger Strategies: Experimental Evidence from Two-Person Noncooperative Games

Journal of Economics & Management Strategy, Vol. 11, p. 685, Winter 2002

Posted: 20 Sep 2006

See all articles by Charles F. Mason

Charles F. Mason

University of Wyoming - College of Business - Department of Economics and Finance

Owen R. Phillips

University of Wyoming - College of Business - Department of Economics and Finance

Abstract

Cooperative equilibria can be supported in a repeated game when players use trigger strategies. This paper tests how well trigger strategies explain behavior in two-person experimental games. Reducing payoffs for choices larger than the Cournot level induces smaller average outputs, behavior generally consistent with trigger strategy models. Reducing payoffs for choices well above the Cournot level will not affect behavior if actions are consistent with a trigger strategy involving longer-lived, less intense punishment phases (the grim-reaper strategy), but would matter for trigger strategies with short-lived but intense punishment phases. Results show that behavior is most consistent with the former.

Suggested Citation

Mason, Charles F. and Phillips, Owen R., In Support of Trigger Strategies: Experimental Evidence from Two-Person Noncooperative Games. Journal of Economics & Management Strategy, Vol. 11, p. 685, Winter 2002 , Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=931475

Charles F. Mason (Contact Author)

University of Wyoming - College of Business - Department of Economics and Finance ( email )

P.O. Box 3985
Laramie, WY 82071-3985
United States
307-766-5336 (Phone)
307-766-5090 (Fax)

Owen R. Phillips

University of Wyoming - College of Business - Department of Economics and Finance ( email )

P.O. Box 3985
Laramie, WY 82071-3985
United States
307-766-2195 (Phone)
307-766-5090 (Fax)

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