Proxyeconomics, the inevitable corruption of proxy-based competition
Oliver Braganza

TL;DR
This paper develops a formal agent-based model to explain how proxy-based competition inevitably leads to corruption, affecting societal goals like scientific integrity and climate action.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive theory integrating complex systems, contest, behavioral, and cultural evolution theories to explain proxy corruption dynamics.
Findings
Model reproduces observed corruption patterns
Equilibrium corruption depends on proxy information and intrinsic incentives
Insights apply to scientific and environmental societal issues
Abstract
When society maintains a competitive system to promote an abstract goal, competition by necessity relies on imperfect proxy measures. For instance profit is used to measure value to consumers, patient volumes to measure hospital performance, or the Journal Impact Factor to measure scientific value. Here we note that \textit{any proxy measure in a competitive societal system becomes a target for the competitors, promoting corruption of the measure}, suggesting a general applicability of what is best known as Campbell's or Goodhart's Law. Indeed, prominent voices have argued that the scientific reproducibility crisis or inaction to the threat of global warming represent instances of such competition induced corruption. Moreover, competing individuals often report that competitive pressures limit their ability to act according to the societal goal, suggesting lock-in. However, despite the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsExperimental Behavioral Economics Studies · Decision-Making and Behavioral Economics · Complex Systems and Time Series Analysis
