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The Prisoner's Dilemma: Why Rational Choices Produce Bad Outcomes

Erajah
ErajahFounder, Scypion Finance
Updated June 10, 20263 min read
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Two OPEC members each secretly decide how much oil to produce. If both hold production at agreed quotas, both earn high prices and high revenue. If one cheats by producing more while the other adheres, the cheater earns more and the adherent loses revenue. If both cheat, both face lower oil prices — worse than the cooperative outcome. Each country faces the same logic: regardless of what the other does, producing more increases its own revenue. Both cheat. Both earn less than they would have by cooperating. This is the structure of OPEC's chronic quota discipline problem — a real-world Prisoner's Dilemma repeated every quarter.

The setup

The Prisoner's Dilemma is a two-player game where each player chooses between cooperate and defect. The payoff structure creates a specific incentive pattern:

Player B: Cooperate Player B: Defect
Player A: Cooperate A: 3, B: 3 (mutual gain) A: 0, B: 5 (A exploited)
Player A: Defect A: 5, B: 0 (B exploited) A: 1, B: 1 (mutual loss)

For Player A: If B cooperates, defecting earns 5 vs. cooperating earns 3 → Defect. If B defects, defecting earns 1 vs. cooperating earns 0 → Defect. Defect is A's dominant strategy regardless of B's choice. The same logic applies to B. The Nash equilibrium is (Defect, Defect) with payoffs of (1, 1) — both worse than the cooperative (Cooperate, Cooperate) payoff of (3, 3).

What happens — and why

The dilemma arises because each player faces a coordination problem. Cooperation produces the best collective outcome but is individually irrational without a credible commitment that the other will cooperate. Defection is individually rational but collectively disastrous.

This structure appears across economic life:

Price wars: competitors undercut each other into thin margins — both defect instead of holding prices at mutually profitable levels.

Arms races: nations spend on military capability that neither would need if both disarmed — a defection equilibrium imposed by the logic of mutual distrust.

Environmental degradation: firms pollute rather than invest in abatement because the cost of unilateral abatement exceeds the benefit to the individual firm, even though collective abatement benefits everyone. The EPA's cap-and-trade framework converts the Prisoner's Dilemma into a cooperative equilibrium by making defection (excess emissions) costly through tradeable permits.

Where you see it in the wild

The NBER research on cartel stability documents how cartels repeatedly form (attempting to reach the cooperative outcome) and collapse (defection when individual firms cheat on quotas) — the Prisoner's Dilemma dynamics playing out in real commodity, chemical, and shipping markets.

The fix (or why it's hard to fix)

Single-shot Prisoner's Dilemmas are stuck at the defection equilibrium. The cooperative outcome becomes reachable through: repeated interaction (reputation and future punishment change the payoffs), binding third-party enforcement (contracts, antitrust law, international treaties), or communication enabling credible commitment. The DOJ's criminal antitrust enforcement makes cartel defection from price-fixing agreements the rational choice by making the penalty for collusion-and-detection worse than the payoff from competing directly.

◆ Sources

  1. EPA Environmental Economics — U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
  2. Industrial Organization — NBER Research Topics
  3. DOJ Antitrust Division — Criminal Enforcement
  4. Prisoner's Dilemma — Investopedia
  5. Game Theory — Library of Economics and Liberty
Microeconomics GlossaryPart 64 of 129
Erajah
Erajah
Founder, Scypion Finance

Founded Scypion Finance because the gap between financial news and real understanding is too wide — and nobody should have to navigate economics alone. Every article starts from zero because that's where most people actually are.

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