| Title: | Communication
and the extraction of natural renewable resources with threshold
externalities |
| Number: | 06-02 |
| Author: | C. Mónica Capra and Tomomi Tanaka |
| Issue Date: | February 2006 |
| Abstract: | Non-binding communication, or cheap talk, has been associated
with the resolution of coordination failures and social dilemmas in
both laboratory and field experiments (see Cooper, et al., 1992, and
Clark, Kay, and Sefton, 2000; Isaac and Walker, 1991, Ostrom and
Walker, 1991, Ostrom, Gardner and Walker, 1994, and Cardenas, Ahn, and
Ostrom, 2003). In simple coordination games, communication is expected
to reduce the uncertainty of what other players are likely to do and
hence facilitate coordination in the better equilibrium. In social
dilemma games, the reasons why communication works are still unclear.
Perhaps communication results in an increased sense of group identity,
an enhancement of normative orientations toward cooperation, or a
necessity to avoid (seek) verbal reprimand (approval) when promises of
cooperation are violated (fulfilled). In this paper we use a simple neoclassical growth model with multiple equilibria to investigate the mechanism by which non-binding communication results in lower equilibrium resource extraction. We use a growth model because it provides an adequate dynamic framework for modeling extraction of a natural resource with threshold externalities. |
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