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How Wealth Accumulation Can Promote Cooperation

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  • Thomas Chadefaux
  • Dirk Helbing

Abstract

Explaining the emergence and stability of cooperation has been a central challenge in biology, economics and sociology. Unfortunately, the mechanisms known to promote it either require elaborate strategies or hold only under restrictive conditions. Here, we report the emergence, survival, and frequent domination of cooperation in a world characterized by selfishness and a strong temptation to defect, when individuals can accumulate wealth. In particular, we study games with local adaptation such as the prisoner's dilemma, to which we add heterogeneity in payoffs. In our model, agents accumulate wealth and invest some of it in their interactions. The larger the investment, the more can potentially be gained or lost, so that present gains affect future payoffs. We find that cooperation survives for a far wider range of parameters than without wealth accumulation and, even more strikingly, that it often dominates defection. This is in stark contrast to the traditional evolutionary prisoner's dilemma in particular, in which cooperation rarely survives and almost never thrives. With the inequality we introduce, on the contrary, cooperators do better than defectors, even without any strategic behavior or exogenously imposed strategies. These results have important consequences for our understanding of the type of social and economic arrangements that are optimal and efficient.

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  • Thomas Chadefaux & Dirk Helbing, 2010. "How Wealth Accumulation Can Promote Cooperation," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 5(10), pages 1-7, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0013471
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0013471
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

    1. Li, Jing & Wang, Jiang, 2018. "Locality based wealth rule favors cooperation in costly public goods games," Chaos, Solitons & Fractals, Elsevier, vol. 116(C), pages 1-7.
    2. Wang, Jianwei & Chen, Wei & Yu, Fengyuan & He, Jialu & Xu, Wenshu, 2022. "Wealth-based rule favors cooperation in costly public goods games when individual selection is inevitable," Applied Mathematics and Computation, Elsevier, vol. 414(C).
    3. Thomas Chadefaux & Dirk Helbing, 2012. "The Rationality of Prejudices," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 7(2), pages 1-6, February.
    4. Smaldino, Paul E. & Schank, Jeffrey C., 2012. "Movement patterns, social dynamics, and the evolution of cooperation," Theoretical Population Biology, Elsevier, vol. 82(1), pages 48-58.
    5. Markus Brede, 2013. "Short Versus Long Term Benefits and the Evolution of Cooperation in the Prisoner's Dilemma Game," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 8(2), pages 1-9, February.
    6. Tao Wang & Keke Huang & Zhen Wang & Xiaoping Zheng, 2015. "Impact of Small Groups with Heterogeneous Preference on Behavioral Evolution in Population Evacuation," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(3), pages 1-13, March.
    7. Chris Girard, 2020. "Globalization and the erosion of geo-ethnic checkpoints: evolving signal-boundary systems at the edge of chaos," Evolutionary and Institutional Economics Review, Springer, vol. 17(1), pages 93-109, January.

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