Rule Enforcing Through Ordering
Abstract
In many real world situations, like minor traffic offenses in big cities, a central authority is tasked with periodic administering punishments to a large number of individuals. Common practice is to give each individual a chance to suffer a smaller fine and be guaranteed to avoid the legal process with probable considerably larger punishment. However, thanks to the large number of offenders and a limited capacity of the central authority, the individual risk is typically small and a rational individual will not choose to pay the fine. Here we show that if the central authority processes the offenders in a publicly known order, it properly incentives the offenders to pay the fine. We show analytically and on realistic experiments that our mechanism promotes non-cooperation and incentives individuals to pay. Moreover, the same holds for an arbitrary coalition. We quantify the expected total payment the central authority receives, and show it increases considerably.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2303.17971,
title = {Rule Enforcing Through Ordering},
author = {David Sychrovský and Sameer Desai and Martin Loebl},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2303.17971},
year = {2023}
}
Comments
Accepted at the 14th Conference on Decision and Game Theory for Security (GameSec-23)