2007
DOI: 10.2202/1555-5879.1099
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Does Punishment Matter? A Refinement of the Inspection Game

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Cited by 22 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…8 An extension of this framework to consider more general compliance tests, such as adhering to a specified standard for seed purity or a residue limit, would require embedding a hypothesis-testing framework akin to inspection games for material accountancy (e.g. 9 Pradiptyo (2007) notes that inspection games with mixed-strategy equilibria can have punishment costs being irrelevant for the inspectee's optimal strategy. 9 Pradiptyo (2007) notes that inspection games with mixed-strategy equilibria can have punishment costs being irrelevant for the inspectee's optimal strategy.…”
Section: One-shot Biosecurity Inspection Game (I) Game Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…8 An extension of this framework to consider more general compliance tests, such as adhering to a specified standard for seed purity or a residue limit, would require embedding a hypothesis-testing framework akin to inspection games for material accountancy (e.g. 9 Pradiptyo (2007) notes that inspection games with mixed-strategy equilibria can have punishment costs being irrelevant for the inspectee's optimal strategy. 9 Pradiptyo (2007) notes that inspection games with mixed-strategy equilibria can have punishment costs being irrelevant for the inspectee's optimal strategy.…”
Section: One-shot Biosecurity Inspection Game (I) Game Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, divergences between results of the simplified model and reality can be explained by players' bounded rationality [6]. It is interesting to note that the situation where one centralised inspection agency inspects compliance of numerous agents fits Becker's model much better than Tsebelis' [15].…”
Section: Game Theory and Inspection Gamesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interestingly, while based on the same fundamental mechanism as the inspection game, Graetz et al (1986) and Dionne et al (2009) have emerged in separate literatures, the former as part of the tax evasion literature and the latter as part of the insurance fraud literature. Recent contributions to the inspection game literature are Andreozzi (2004), Friehe (2008) and Pradiptyo (2007). Basu et al (1992), Besley and Mclaren (1993), Mookherjee and Png (1995) and Marjit and Shi (1998) develop corruption models, in which detection is endogenised, although not in the same way as in the inspection game.…”
Section: Related Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%