yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

How Game Theory Solves Tough Negotiations: Corporate Tax Cuts, Nuclear War, and Parenting| Big Think


3m read
·Nov 3, 2024

Processing might take a few minutes. Refresh later.

So game theory is the science of strategic thinking. The idea here is that any time that you’re interacting with another person who has their own interests and is trying to achieve their own ends, they are trying to do the best they can given what they want. You’re trying to do the best you can given what you want, and so you’re interacting in a strategic situation. One of you is trying to achieve what you want, the other is trying to achieve what they want.

Game theory is a mathematical theory that attempts to make sense of how it is that people interact in these strategic situations. It was originally developed in economics in order to try to understand economic behavior like why people buy certain things or why they’re willing to work for certain wages. But later on, it was expanded and applied to a variety of different situations including biology, international relations, and even interpersonal relations like friendships and parenting and family relations.

So one of the big problems that parents constantly confront when they’re raising two kids is that the kids will sometimes compete with one another in order to get out of doing family chores, leaving them to the siblings. But the problem is, of course, the other kid, the sibling or friend, is going to figure that out too and so will try and shirk as well. In the end, the parents are left for a messy room, the kids are upset with one another, and nobody is happy.

One of the things that game theory has tried to deal with are these types of situations—they’re sometimes called social dilemmas or prisoner’s dilemmas. These are situations where each individual has a private incentive to do something, but when both of them follow their private incentives, the group or the two siblings are worse off than if they had ignored their private incentives and just worked together.

One of the seminal discoveries in this area is that by teaching kids or countries, or anyone for that matter, that you can break up that interaction into a bunch of little, small interactions where you can cooperate with the other one—but just on condition that the other one cooperated with you before. You can change a bad social dilemma into a positive interaction. This was put to its biggest use during the Cold War.

Reagan and Gorbachev negotiated the START treaty with one another, and one of the big problems that they had is: how can you be sure that while you’re eliminating nuclear weapons, your adversary is also eliminating nuclear weapons? So rather than saying, “We’re just going to get rid of some large percentage of our nuclear weapons and hope that the USSR would do so as well,” they broke up the interaction into a bunch of little, tiny ones.

So the USSR would eliminate just a few nuclear weapons, then the U.S. would eliminate just a few nuclear weapons. They would check, and then they would go onto the next stage, and then each would eliminate a few more, and they would go onto the next stage. This process of taking a big interaction and breaking it down into little, small parts is one that we can use all over our lives, including in parenting.

So rather than Mom or Dad coming into the room and saying to the kids, “Clean up the room,” and then leaving, Mom and Dad can come up and say, “Here’s the deal: each of you take turns putting away one toy, and you make a deal with one another: ‘If you put away your toy I’ll put away mine.’” And by taking the big interaction, cleaning up the room, and breaking it into a series of small interactions, you make it feasible for the kids to cooperate with one another in a way that wasn’t really possible before when you just left them with one big chore where they had to decide whether they wanted to do it or not.

One popular proposal that’s often occurred in tax debates is that we ought to lower our corporate tax rate in order to encourage companies that have located their assets offshore to bring them back into the United States. The idea here is that if we lower our corporate tax rate to be competitive with other cou...

More Articles

View All
'The Big Short' Explained (Movie Commentary w/ @HamishHodder and Jason Hughes)
All right everyone, hello hello! We should be live right now. Welcome everybody, welcome in! Should introduce who I’ve got alongside me tonight. Of course you guys know him, Hamish Hodder. How you doing, Hamish? Welcome in! I’m doing well, I’m very excit…
After the Avalanche: Life as an Adventure Photographer With PTSD (Part 1) | Nat Geo Live!
I’m gonna start before any adventures for the magazine, before I was out in Antarctica, before any of this happened. I’m gonna start by telling you how cool I was as a kid, because honestly, I was pretty cool. I was the first hipster ever, sideways trucke…
Leah Culver of Breaker and Tom Sparks of YC Answer Your Questions About Security and Podcasting
All right, so how about we start with some questions from Twitter. I actually think this one might have been on Facebook, so Brady Simpson asked, “How do we deal with the ever-increasing pressure from governments trying to get into devices?” Tom, do you …
Introducing a New Cheetah! – Day 81 | Safari Live
Interim! Let’s send you all the way on down-south, 1,600 miles to Scott. Hello everyone! You may have just seen a bird fly through the thick undergrowth there. We were hoping it would stick around. So, it’s calling it “say orange-breasted bush shrike,” a…
Worked example: Derivative of cos_(x) using the chain rule | AP Calculus AB | Khan Academy
Let’s say we have the function f of x, which is equal to cosine of x to the third power. We could also write it like this: cosine of x to the third power. We are interested in figuring out what f prime of x is going to be equal to. So, we want to figure o…
War + Investing in China
Um, what are you paying attention to? What is concerning to you as it relates to the conflict internally? Um, now, and very classically, um, there’s the emergence of populism of both sides. Populism on the right, populism on the left. Populism means, um,…