CeDEx
Centre for Decision Research and Experimental Economics

CeDEx 2019-01: Arms Races and Conflict: Experimental Evidence

Summary

We study escalation and aggression in an experimental first-strike game in which two participants play multiple rounds of a money-earning task. In each round, both players can spend money to accumulate weapons. The player with more weapons can spend money to strike against the other player, which almost totally eliminates the victim’s earnings potential and removes their capacity to strike. Weapons can serve as a means of deterrence. In four treatments, we find that deterrence is strengthened if weapon stocking cannot be observed, that a balance of power is effective in maintaining peace, and that mutually beneficial trade decreases the risk of confrontation, but not necessarily the likelihood of costly arms races.

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Authors

Klaus Abbink, Lu Dong & Lingbo Huang

 

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Posted on Monday 18th February 2019

Centre for Decision Research and Experimental Economics

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University of Nottingham
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