Prisoner’s Dilemma: Concept and Example

Here in this section, we study the prisoner’s dilemma game where the non-cooperative equilibrium makes both players worse off than if they were able to cooperate. The problem with the Nash equilibrium is that it does not necessarily lead to Pareto-efficient outcomes.

Suppose there are two persons, prisoner A and prisoner B and both have been caught for committing a bank robbery. In order to procure a confession from them, they are interrogated separately so that they cannot communicate with each other. The payoff matrix for this game is given in Table.

Prisoners Dilemma Table
Prisoners Dilemma Table

The Strategic form of the game can be written as:

Players: Two players-Prisoner A and Prisoner B.

Strategy: Each player can either confess or not confess his crime.

Payoff Matrix: The payoffs show the years of imprisonment.

  • The upper left-hand corner of the payoff matrix tells us that if both prisoners confess the crime, both would get imprisonment of 5 years each.
  • The upper right-hand corner tells us that if prisoner A confesses and prisoner B does not confess, then prisoner A would get 10 years of imprisonment, and prisoner B would go free.
  • The lower left-hand corner tells us that if prisoner A not confesses and prisoner B confesses, then prisoner A would get no imprisonment, and prisoner B would get 10 years of imprisonment.
  • The lower right-hand corner tells us that if prisoner A does not confess a crime and prisoner B also not confesses, then both get 8 years of imprisonment each.

Here each prisoner faces uncertainty regarding how the other person will behave, i.e. whether he will confess or not confess. So each person has to make an independent choice whether to confess or not confess a crime.

Prisoner A reasons as follows:

First: If prisoner B confesses a crime, and prisoner A also chooses the same, then prisoner A will get 5 years of imprisonment. But if prisoner A chooses not to confess, then prisoner A will get no imprisonment. Thus, the best strategy of Player A is not to confess a crime. So, person A claimed my best strategy is not to confess.

Secondly: If prisoner B does not confess a crime and prisoner A also chooses the same, then prisoner A will get 8 years of imprisonment. But if prisoner A chooses to confess, then prisoner A will get 10 years of imprisonment. Thus, the best strategy of Player B is not to confess a crime. So, person B claimed my best strategy again is not to confess. Prisoner B will also reason in the same way.

As a result, they both end up not confessing a crime and getting 8 years of imprisonment. This is the Nash Equilibrium. But if they had been able to communicate with each other, they would both have confessed to the crime and gotten 5 years of imprisonment.

Once again, the non-cooperative equilibrium makes both prisoners worse off than if they were able to cooperate, i.e. if both are making decisions, they end up not confessing to a crime.

Read More- Microeconomics

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  2. Methods of Analysis in Economics
  3. Problem of Choice & Production Possibility Curve
  4. Concept of Market & Market Mechanism in Economics
  5. Concept of Demand and Supply in Economics
  6. Concept of Equilibrium & Dis-equilibrium in Economics
  7. Cardinal Utility Theory: Concept, Assumptions, Equilibrium & Drawbacks
  8. Ordinal Utility Theory: Meaning & Assumptions
  9. Indifference Curve: Concept, Properties & Shapes
  10. Budget Line: Concept & Explanation
  11. Consumer Equilibrium: Ordinal Approach, Income & Price Consumption Curve
  12. Applications of Indifference Curve
  13. Measuring Effects of Income & Excise Taxes and Income & Excise Subsidies
  14. Normal Goods: Income & Substitution Effects
  15. Inferior Goods: Income & Substitution Effects
  16. Giffen Paradox or Giffen Goods: Income & Substitution Effects
  17. Concept of Elasticity: Demand & Supply
  18. Demand Elasticity: Price Elasticity, Income Elasticity & Cross Elasticity
  19. Determinants of Price Elasticity of Demand
  20. Measuring Price Elasticity of Demand
  21. Price Elasticity of Supply and Its Determinants
  22. Revealed Preference Theory of Samuelson: Concept, Assumptions & Explanation
  23. Hicks’s Revision of Demand Theory
  24. Choice Involving Risk and Uncertainty
  25. Inter Temporal Choice: Budget Constraint & Consumer Preferences
  26. Theories in Demand Analysis
  27. Elementary Theory of Price Determination: Demand, Supply & Equilibrium Price
  28. Cobweb Model: Concept, Theorem and Lagged Adjustments in Interrelated Markets
  29. Production Function: Concept, Assumptions & Law of Diminishing Return
  30. Isoquant: Assumptions and Properties
  31. Isoquant Map and Economic Region of Production
  32. Elasticity of Technical Substitution
  33. Law of Returns to Scale
  34. Production Function and Returns to Scale
  35. Euler’s Theorem and Product Exhaustion Theorem
  36. Technical Progress (Production Function)
  37. Multi-Product Firm and Production Possibility Curve
  38. Concept of Production Function
  39. Cobb Douglas Production Function
  40. CES Production Function
  41. VES Production Function
  42. Translog Production Function
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  44. Traditional Theory of Costs: Short Run
  45. Traditional Theory of Costs: Long Run
  46. Modern Theory Of Cost: Short-run and Long-run
  47. Modern Theory Of Cost: Short Run
  48. Modern Theory Of Cost: Long Run
  49. Empirical Evidences on the Shape of Cost Curves
  50. Derivation of Short-Run Average and Marginal Cost Curves From Total Cost Curves
  51. Cost Curves In The Long-Run: LRAC and LRMC
  52. Economies of Scope
  53. The Learning Curve
  54. Perfect Competition: Meaning and Assumptions
  55. Perfect Competition: Pricing and Output Decisions
  56. Perfect Competition: Demand Curve
  57. Perfect Competition Equilibrium: Short Run and Long Run
  58. Monopoly: Meaning, Characteristics and Equilibrium (Short-run & Long-run)
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  61. Welfare Aspects of Monopoly
  62. Price Discrimination under Monopoly: Types, Degree and Equilibrium
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  65. Difference Between Perfect Competition and Monopolistic Competition
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  67. Difference Between Oligopoly Market and Monopolistic Market
  68. Oligopoly: Collusive Models- Cartel & Price Leadership
  69. Oligopoly: Non-Collusive Models- Cournot, Stackelberg, Bertrand, Sweezy or Kinked Demand Curve
  70. Monopsony Market Structure
  71. Bilateral Monopoly Market Structure
  72. Workable Competition in Market: Meaning and Explanation
  73. Baumol’s Sales Revenue Maximization Model
  74. Williamson’s Model of Managerial Discretion
  75. Robin Marris Model of Managerial Enterprise
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  82. Prisoner’s Dilemma: Concept and Example

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