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Why and when coalitions split? An alternative analytical approach with an application to environmental agreements

Author

Listed:
  • Raouf Boucekkine

    (Rennes School of Business)

  • Carmen Camacho

    (Paris School of Economics & CNRS)

  • Weihua Ruan

    (Purdue University Northwest)

  • Benteng Zou

    (DEM, Université du Luxembourg)

Abstract

We use a parsimonious two-stage differential game setting where the duration of the first stage, the coalition stage, depends on the will of a particular player to leave the coalition through an explicit timing variable. By specializing in a standard linear-quadratic environmental model augmented with a minimal constitutional setting for the coalition (payoff share parameter), we are able to analytically extract several nontrivial findings. Three key aspects drive the results: the technological gap as an indicator of heterogeneity across players, the constitution of the coalition and the intensity of the public bad (here, the pollution damage). We provide with a full analytical solution to the two-stage differential game. In particular, we characterize the intermediate parametric cases leading to optimal nite time splitting. A key characteristic of these nite-time-lived coalitions is the requirement of the payoff share accruing to the splitting country to be large enough. Incidentally, our two-stage differential game setting reaches the conclusion that splitting countries are precisely those which use to benefit the most from the coalition. Constraining the payoff share to be low by Constitution may lead to optimal everlasting coalitions only provided initial pollution is high enough, which may cover the emergency cases we are witnessing nowadays.

Suggested Citation

  • Raouf Boucekkine & Carmen Camacho & Weihua Ruan & Benteng Zou, 2022. "Why and when coalitions split? An alternative analytical approach with an application to environmental agreements," DEM Discussion Paper Series 22-05, Department of Economics at the University of Luxembourg.
  • Handle: RePEc:luc:wpaper:22-05
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    File URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10993/51061
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    1. Raouf Boucekkine & Carmen Camacho & Weihua Ruan & Benteng Zou, 2022. "Optimal coalition splitting with heterogenous strategies," PSE Working Papers halshs-03770401, HAL.

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    JEL classification:

    • C61 - Mathematical and Quantitative Methods - - Mathematical Methods; Programming Models; Mathematical and Simulation Modeling - - - Optimization Techniques; Programming Models; Dynamic Analysis
    • C73 - Mathematical and Quantitative Methods - - Game Theory and Bargaining Theory - - - Stochastic and Dynamic Games; Evolutionary Games
    • D71 - Microeconomics - - Analysis of Collective Decision-Making - - - Social Choice; Clubs; Committees; Associations

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