A Note on the Cost-Benefit Ratio in Self-Enforcing Agreements
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Date
2009-04-03T08:48:34Z
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Abstract
Since the analysis of a self-enforcing agreement by Barrett (1994) it has
been clear that the ratio between the slopes of the marginal cost and
marginal benefit functions is conclusive for stability of self-enforcing
agreements. For example Finus and Rundshagen (1998) stated: 'it
turns out that all qualitative results depend only on this ratio' as it determines
the non-orthogonal free-riding response along Nash reaction
functions. This note shows that this 'pure' connection between the
cost-benefit ratio and non-orthogonal free-riding response occurs due
to the 'anonymous contributions' property of public goods, and in such
cases the cost-benefit ratio effect holds regardless the functional form of
objectives, the formulation of congestion or the degree of impureness of
the public good. Therefore we expect to see the cost-benefit ratio still
be the conclusive component also in self-enforcing agreements based
on more general functional forms than seen hitherto in the literature.
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public goods, self-enforcing agreements, reaction function, coalition theory