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Beyond Hawks and Doves: Can inequality ease coordination?
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Beyond Hawks and Doves: Can inequality ease coordination?

Maria Bigoni, Mario Blazquez De Paz and Chloé Le Coq
Economic Theory, Vol.81(1-2), pp.93-111
2026

Abstract

Asymmetric payoff matrix Conditional cooperation Equilibrium selection Experiment Hawk-Dove game Inequality aversion C72 C91 D63 D74
Abstract It is often argued that inequality may worsen coordination failures as it exacerbates conflicts of interests, making it difficult to achieve an efficient outcome. This paper shows that this needs not to be always the case. In a context in which two interacting populations have conflicting interests, we introduce ex-ante inequality, by making one population stronger than the other. This reduces the cost of miscoordination for the weakest population, and at the same time it makes some equilibria more equitable than others, thus more focal and attractive for inequality-averse players. Hence, both social preferences and strategic risk considerations may ease coordination. We provide experimental support for this hypothesis, by considering an extended two-population Hawk–Dove game, where ex-ante inequality, number of pure-strategy equilibria, and cost of coordination vary across treatments. We find that subjects coordinate more often on the efficient outcomes in the treatment with ex-ante inequality.
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