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On The Structure of Competitive Societies

E. Ben-Naim, Los Alamos National Laboratory
F. Vazquez, Los Alamos National Laboratory
S. Redner, Los Alamos National Laboratory

Abstract

We model the dynamics of social structure by a simple interacting particle system. The social standing of an individual agent is represented by an integer-valued fitness that changes via two offsetting processes. When two agents interact one advances: the fitter with probability p and the less fit with probability 1-p. The fitness of an agent may also decline with rate r. From a scaling analysis of the underlying master equations for the fitness distribution of the population, we find four distinct social structures as a function of the governing parameters p and r. These include: (i) a static lower-class society where all agents have finite fitness; (ii) an upwardly-mobile middle-class society; (iii) a hierarchical society where a finite fraction of the population belongs to a middle class and a complementary fraction to the lower class; (iv) an egalitarian society where all agents are upwardly mobile and have nearly the same fitness. We determine the basic features of the fitness distributions in these four phases.

Suggested Citation

E. Ben-Naim, F. Vazquez, and S. Redner, Eur. Phys. Jour. B 49, 531 (2006)



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