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Organizations and Overlapping Generations Games: Memory, Communication, and Altruism

Roger Lagunoff and Akihiko Matsui ()

Game Theory and Information from University Library of Munich, Germany

Abstract: This paper studies the role of memory and communication in games between ongoing organizations. In each organization, each individual, upon entry into the game, replaces his predecessor who has the same preferences and faces the same strategic possibilities. Entry across distinct organizations are asynchronous: no two individuals alive at a date t have entered at the same time. We model these as repeated games between overlapping generations of individuals (OLG games). It has been shown elsewhere that Folk Theorems hold in OLG games with long enough lived individuals who can perfectly observe the past. However, the Folk Theorem fails for many games when individuals have no prior memory, i.e., no individual can witness events that occur before his entry into the game. We examine OLG games without prior memory. We then examine such games when the past can be communicated by one generation to the next through ``cheap talk" communication. With costly communication, an approximate Folk Theorem holds only when there is some altruistic link between cohorts in an organization. The equilibria in this Folk Theorem require a special form of intergenerational sanctions. In these sanctions, punishment is sometimes carried out long after both victim and perpetrator have left the game. Without this special structure, altruism may in fact destroy cooperation when it would otherwise be possible.

Keywords: Organizations; Overlapping Generations Games; Memory; Communication; Altruism. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: C72 C73 D74 D82 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 28 pages
Date: 2001-04-04
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-mic
Note: Type of Document - LaTex/pdf ; prepared on IBM PC ; to print on HP/PostScript; pages: 28 ; figures: included. We have benefitted from helpful comments and conversations with Luca Anderlini, Hans Haller, and Takashi Shimizu. This research is partially supported by grants-in-aid for scientific research of the Ministry of Education of Japan.
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Related works:
Journal Article: Organizations and overlapping generations games: Memory, communication, and altruism (2004) Downloads
Working Paper: Organizations and Overlapping Generations Games: Memory, Communication, and Altruism (2001) Downloads
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