GTCYLGTHOct 23, 2025

Strategic Costs of Perceived Bias in Fair Selection

arXiv:2510.20606v1h-index: 35
Originality Highly original
AI Analysis

This addresses inequality in meritocratic systems for policymakers and institutions, offering a novel bridge between rational-choice and structural explanations, though it is incremental in modeling one stage of a feedback cycle.

The paper tackles the problem of persistent disparities in meritocratic systems like admissions and hiring by developing a game-theoretic model showing how perceived differences in post-selection value across socioeconomic groups lead to rational effort disparities, propagating inequality even under fair selection based solely on merit.

Meritocratic systems, from admissions to hiring, aim to impartially reward skill and effort. Yet persistent disparities across race, gender, and class challenge this ideal. Some attribute these gaps to structural inequality; others to individual choice. We develop a game-theoretic model in which candidates from different socioeconomic groups differ in their perceived post-selection value--shaped by social context and, increasingly, by AI-powered tools offering personalized career or salary guidance. Each candidate strategically chooses effort, balancing its cost against expected reward; effort translates into observable merit, and selection is based solely on merit. We characterize the unique Nash equilibrium in the large-agent limit and derive explicit formulas showing how valuation disparities and institutional selectivity jointly determine effort, representation, social welfare, and utility. We further propose a cost-sensitive optimization framework that quantifies how modifying selectivity or perceived value can reduce disparities without compromising institutional goals. Our analysis reveals a perception-driven bias: when perceptions of post-selection value differ across groups, these differences translate into rational differences in effort, propagating disparities backward through otherwise "fair" selection processes. While the model is static, it captures one stage of a broader feedback cycle linking perceptions, incentives, and outcome--bridging rational-choice and structural explanations of inequality by showing how techno-social environments shape individual incentives in meritocratic systems.

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