Offsetting Uncertainty: Reassurance with Two-Sided Incomplete Information
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Haynes, Kyle
Yoder, Brandon
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Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
Conventional models of bargaining and reassurance under incomplete information assume that actors’ behavioral
signals are objectively cooperative or noncooperative. Even if actors are uncertain of each other’s preferences, they know
what types of actions the other will view as cooperative. Yet on many real-world issues, cooperation is subjective, and what
constitutes a cooperative action is conditional on the receiver’s preferences. We present a formal model showing that in these
cases, two-sided incomplete information actually incentivizes honest behavior and facilitates credible signaling. Because
uncertain senders do not know whether a particular action will be interpreted as cooperative, they have little incentive to
misrepresent, and instead honestly pursue their true goals. Thus, where cooperation is subjective, mutual uncertainty is
“offsetting,” such that credible signals allow actors to quickly and accurately update their beliefs. We illustrate this logic
through a case study of the Sino–Soviet split, and highlight the model’s implications for contemporary U.S.–China relations
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American Journal of Political Science
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Open Access
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