Social insurance contribution evasion is a pervasive issue, particularly in China, with significant socioeconomic repercussions. This study develops a tripartite evolutionary game model involving local governments, enterprises, and employees to explore evolutionarily stable strategies (ESS) under various scenarios. We identify four potential ESS within the game system, with the final outcome depending on central government rewards for local governments’ enforcement efforts, penalties imposed by enterprises on employees for work indolence, and employee reciprocity toward compliant enterprises. When these three parameters exceed critical thresholds, the system converges toward an optimal strategy combination characterized by strict collection, compliant contribution, and active engagement. Measures that can accelerate convergence toward the ideal equilibrium include reducing the cost of strict collection, increasing penalties for non-compliant enterprises, strengthening employee whistleblowing incentives, and lowering social insurance contributions. These findings offer valuable insights for policymakers to curb contribution evasion.
Wang et al. (Wed,) studied this question.