International audienceMean-payoff zero-sum stochastic games can be studied by means of a nonlinear spectral problem. When the state space is finite, the latter consists in finding an eigenpair (u,λ) solution of T(u)=λe+u, where T:Rn→Rn is the Shapley (or dynamic programming) operator, λ is a scalar, e is the unit vector, and u∈Rn. The scalar λ yields the mean payoff per time unit, and the vector u, called the bias, allows one to determine optimal stationary strategies. The existence of the eigenpair (u,λ) is generally related to ergodicity conditions. A basic issue is to understand for which classes of games the bias vector is unique (up to an additive constant). In this paper, we consider perfect-information zero-sum stochastic games with ...