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Continuation-Performance Decomposition in Dynamic Games with Irreversible Failure

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  • Nicholas H. Kirk

Abstract

Once failure is irreversible, continuation payoffs cannot be meaningfully aggregated across strategies that differ in their survival properties. Standard scalar evaluation sidesteps this by arbitrarily completing payoffs beyond termination, but such completions are extrinsic to the game form. This paper introduces continuation-performance decomposition (CPD), proving that any evaluation satisfying natural regularity conditions, such as failure-completion invariance, survival locality, and local expected-utility coherence -- must separate continuation from performance lexicographically. Continuation priority thus emerges as a consequence of well-posed evaluation, not as a behavioral assumption. We establish equivalence between CPD and the limit of games with diverging failure penalties, show that viability is a game-form invariant independent of payoffs, and apply the framework to bank runs: preemptive withdrawals reflect rational viability vetoes rather than coordination failure when continuation is distributively asymmetric. CPD resolves a representational problem, not a preference problem.

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  • Nicholas H. Kirk, 2026. "Continuation-Performance Decomposition in Dynamic Games with Irreversible Failure," Papers 2602.08074, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2602.08074
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    References listed on IDEAS

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