the undercover economist
columns
- Bailouts Are Inevitable, Even Desirable
Stop complaining about the "moral hazard" problem and enjoy the rescue.
Tim Harford
posted Oct. 4, 2008 - Burn Her!
Why it's dangerous to be a witch in a recession.
Tim Harford
posted Sept. 20, 2008 - Why Houses Cost More in Summer
An economics mystery has finally been solved.
Tim Harford
posted Sept. 6, 2008 - The Fruits of Their Labors
An amazing economics experiment and how it got field workers to pick a lot more strawberries.
Tim Harford
posted Aug. 23, 2008 - The Wisdom of Crowds?
A single economic forecast is usually wrong. But groups of economic forecasts are often just as mistaken. Why?
Tim Harford
posted Aug. 9, 2008 - Search for more the undercover economist articles
- Subscribe to the the undercover economist RSS feed
- View our complete the undercover economist archive
Hezbollah and the Prisoner's DilemmaCan game theory solve the Israel-Lebanon war?
By Tim HarfordPosted Thursday, Aug. 3, 2006, at 5:57 PM ET

Israel's strategy for dealing with Hezbollah has been called "tenfold deterrence": Any attack will be met with a far more forceful counterattack. Unfortunately both for Israelis and Lebanese, the strategy did not deter Hezbollah's missiles.
It might seem strange for an economist to offer even these obvious opinions on military strategy, but economists have been armchair generals since the development in the 1940s of game theory by John Von Neumann, a mathematician, and Oskar Morgenstern, an economist. Game theory is the study of situations in which each side's actions influence and are influenced by the other side's actions. Since the Second World War, game theorists have pondered strategy, deterrence, and Armageddon.
Game theory's power to summarize complex situations in a simple model is sometimes too seductive. The two most overinterpreted ideas in game theory are related to deterrence: the prisoner's dilemma and the strategy sometimes believed to "solve" the dilemma, "tit for tat."
The prisoner's dilemma was popularized by a simple story. Two men are captured by the police and separately offered the same plea-bargain: "If you confess and he doesn't, you walk free; if you both confess, you'll both get five years; if neither of you confess, you'll both get one year; if he confesses and you don't, you'll get 20 years." Rational prisoners will confess, wishing there was a way to commit each other to silence. Game theorists have known since the 1950s that when the prisoner's dilemma is repeated indefinitely, more cooperative strategies can flourish. This insight was independently rediscovered and made famous by Robert Axelrod, a political scientist who organized a computerized tournament in which competitors submitted simple programs to play the prisoner's dilemma. The champion was "tit for tat," which begins by cooperating with its fellow prisoner (staying silent) but punishes a squealer by confessing on the next turn. Axelrod argued that "tit for tat" was successful because it was easy to interpret, hard to exploit, began cooperatively, and quickly forgave transgressions by returning to cooperation. It has proved a magical myth: that you should speak softly and carry a big stick, that "an eye for an eye" can produce cooperation in unpromising situations. Axelrod's idea was repeated in a horde of popular science books.
But "tit for tat" is just a little too much of a poster child. The repeated prisoner's dilemma is a poor description of real-world situations. It didn't describe the Cold War, when a nuclear exchange was a one-off game if ever there was one. It doesn't describe the asymmetric struggle between Israel on one hand and multiple decision makers—Lebanon? Hezbollah?—on the other.
Most important, the "prisoner's dilemma" is merely a two-player game. Game theorists such as Ken Binmore, a professor at University College London, say this is a crucial omission. Most social arrangements stand or fail with the help of third parties. The crisis in Lebanon will be no exception.
In any case, "tit for tat" is not quite as successful as conventional wisdom would have you believe. A team from Southampton University kicked "tit for tat" off the top spot in a rerun of Axelrod's tournament by entering a collection of team players who colluded with each other. Another successful strategy is "tat for tit," which first tries to exploit the other person and plays nicely only if that doesn't work. Another winning approach is even more depressing, punishing cheats with eternal vengeance.
It is known simply as "grim."
feedback | about us | help | advertise | newsletters | mobile
User Agreement and Privacy Policy | All rights reserved
- Today's Headlines
- Poll: 85 Of Americans Would Like To See Candidates Compete In Funny Obstacle Course
Wed, 15 Oct 2008 14:00:01 -0400 - 'I Am Under 18' Button Clicked For First Time In History Of Internet
Wed, 15 Oct 2008 07:30:31 -0400 - British Corpses Piling Up
Wed, 15 Oct 2008 07:00:36 -0400 - » More from the Onion
Fiscal Drunkards, Dry OutRuth Marcus | Which candidate could lead us to economic sobriety?
Meyerson: Gods That FailedMilbank: Confidence Isn't Cheap
- Telnaes: McCain's Foray Into Pandora's Box
- Gerson: How He Was Ambushed by History
- Parker: Palin Can Save the Mainstream Media
- Topic A: A Game-Changing Debate?
- Today's Headlines
- White House Fails to Fill Key Anti-Terror Job
Wed, 15 Oct 2008 17:27:11 GMT - Suicide Spurs Web Regulation in South Korea
Wed, 15 Oct 2008 15:24:47 GMT - Are You a 'Digital Native?'
Tue, 14 Oct 2008 20:55:29 GMT - » More from Newsweek
- Today's Headlines
- Over Before it Began?
Tue, 14 October 2008 17:58:14 GMT - A Bucket of Chicken and No Clue
Tue, 14 October 2008 16:57:24 GMT - The Hitler Comparison
Tue, 14 October 2008 19:01:10 GMT - » More from The Root

the undercover economist













