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Journal Article

Deterrence through punishment can resolve collective risk dilemmas in carbon emission games

Authors

Jiang,  Luo-Luo
External Organizations;

Chen,  Zhi
External Organizations;

Perc,  Matjaž
External Organizations;

Wang,  Zhen
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/Juergen.Kurths

Kurths,  Jürgen
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

Moreno,  Yamir
External Organizations;

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28459oa.pdf
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Citation

Jiang, L.-L., Chen, Z., Perc, M., Wang, Z., Kurths, J., Moreno, Y. (2023): Deterrence through punishment can resolve collective risk dilemmas in carbon emission games. - Chaos, 33, 4, 043127.
https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0147226


Cite as: https://publications.pik-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_28459
Abstract
Collective risk social dilemmas are at the heart of the most pressing global challenges we are facing today, including climate change mitigation and the overuse of natural resources. Previous research has framed this problem as a public goods game (PGG), where a dilemma arises between short-term interests and long-term sustainability. In the PGG, subjects are placed in groups and asked to choose between cooperation and defection, while keeping in mind their personal interests as well as the commons. Here, we explore how and to what extent the costly punishment of defectors is successful in enforcing cooperation by means of human experiments. We show that an apparent irrational underestimation of the risk of being punished plays an important role, and that for sufficiently high punishment fines, this vanishes and the threat of deterrence suffices to preserve the commons. Interestingly, however, we find that high fines not only avert freeriders, but they also demotivate some of the most generous altruists. As a consequence, the tragedy of the commons is predominantly averted due to cooperators that contribute only their “fair share” to the common pool. We also find that larger groups require larger fines for the deterrence of punishment to have the desired prosocial effect.