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Main Authors: Heap, Shaun Hargreaves, Seven, Mehmet Mars
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.19359
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author Heap, Shaun Hargreaves
Seven, Mehmet Mars
author_facet Heap, Shaun Hargreaves
Seven, Mehmet Mars
contents We study whether zero-sum decision rules, maximin and minimax, harm agents' interests in positive-sum strategic environments relative to Nash equilibrium behavior or, more generally, than best response behaviour. Contrary to an influential evolutionary view, we give illustrations where maximin serves an agent's interests better than Nash equilibrium behaviour. We also show that these illustration are not atypical or idiosyncratic because, in our main result, the class of such games where a maximin profile strictly Pareto dominates all Nash equilibria has the same cardinality as the class of games in which a Nash equilibrium strictly Pareto dominates all maximin profiles. Thus, neither behavior is generally superior. We further identify additional mechanisms favoring maximin over Nash equilibrium, including coordination failures under multiple equilibria, where maximin can outperform Nash play in realised-pay-off terms. A systematic analysis of strictly ordinal symmetric 3x3 games shows that these effects arise with non-trivial frequency. Our findings, therefore, suggest that the observed rise in zero-sum thinking in many rich countries, when associated with a maximin decision rule, will not be readily displaced through its generation of inferior pay-offs.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_19359
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle How damaging is zero-sum thinking to an agent's interests when the world is positive-sum?
Heap, Shaun Hargreaves
Seven, Mehmet Mars
Theoretical Economics
Computer Science and Game Theory
We study whether zero-sum decision rules, maximin and minimax, harm agents' interests in positive-sum strategic environments relative to Nash equilibrium behavior or, more generally, than best response behaviour. Contrary to an influential evolutionary view, we give illustrations where maximin serves an agent's interests better than Nash equilibrium behaviour. We also show that these illustration are not atypical or idiosyncratic because, in our main result, the class of such games where a maximin profile strictly Pareto dominates all Nash equilibria has the same cardinality as the class of games in which a Nash equilibrium strictly Pareto dominates all maximin profiles. Thus, neither behavior is generally superior. We further identify additional mechanisms favoring maximin over Nash equilibrium, including coordination failures under multiple equilibria, where maximin can outperform Nash play in realised-pay-off terms. A systematic analysis of strictly ordinal symmetric 3x3 games shows that these effects arise with non-trivial frequency. Our findings, therefore, suggest that the observed rise in zero-sum thinking in many rich countries, when associated with a maximin decision rule, will not be readily displaced through its generation of inferior pay-offs.
title How damaging is zero-sum thinking to an agent's interests when the world is positive-sum?
topic Theoretical Economics
Computer Science and Game Theory
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.19359