

Monday, August 11, 2008 • 12:15 PM • Medium Conference Room, SFI
Willemien Kets Tilburg University and Santa Fe Institute Postdoctoral Fellow
Behavior Discussion Group - Inequality and Network Structure
This paper explores the manner in which the structure of a social
network constrains the level of inequality that can be sustained among
its members. We assume that any distribution of value across the
network must be stable with respect to coalitional deviations, and
that players can form a deviating coalition only if they constitute a
clique in the network. We show that if the network is bipartite, there
is a unique stable payoff distribution that is maximally unequal in
that it does not Lorenz dominate any other stable distribution. We
obtain a complete ordering of the class of bipartite networks and show
that those with larger maximum independent sets can sustain greater
levels of inequality. The intuition behind this result is that
networks with larger maximum independent sets are more sparse and
hence offer fewer opportunities for coalitional deviations. We also
demonstrate that standard centrality measures do not consistently
predict inequality. We extend our framework by allowing a group of
players to deviate if they are all within distance k of each other,
and show that the ranking of networks by the extent of extremal
inequality is not invariant in k.
Host: Dan Hruschka
