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Tullock contest alliances with proportional prize-sharing agreements: private collective action mechanisms?

James Boudreau () and Shane Sanders ()
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James Boudreau: Kennesaw State University
Shane Sanders: Syracuse University

Public Choice, 2025, vol. 202, issue 3, No 4, 367-381

Abstract: Abstract This paper focuses on humanity’s supposedly irrational behavior in conflict decision-making, challenging two rationalist puzzles in political science and economics: war’s inefficiency and alliance formation. More specifically, we ask whether alliances can benefit the allies. Standard Tullock contest alliances are plagued by free riding, undermining successful collective action. In a three-party contest environment when two of the parties ally, input substitution and fixed prize division hinder collective action. Analyzing the same contest with input-cost complementarity and proportional prize division, we propose a transformative solution that avoids the usual problems of alliance formation and stability. While input-cost complementarity partially mitigates those concerns, a proportional prize-sharing agreement offers a comprehensive remedy, ensuring equitable contributions and gains for the allied parties. The proposed approach not only resolves the alliance-formation puzzle but also enhances the allies’ prospects for success.

Keywords: Contests; Resource conflict; Alliance formation puzzle; Collective action; NATO (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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DOI: 10.1007/s11127-024-01219-4

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