House Money Effects in Public Good Experiments

被引:0
作者
Jeremy Clark
机构
[1] University of Canterbury,Economics Department
来源
Experimental Economics | 2002年 / 5卷
关键词
house money effects; experimental methodology;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Are decisions in economics experiments distorted because the money subjects risk comes from the experimenter rather than their own pockets? There is some evidence that people receiving small, one time “windfall gains” have a higher marginal propensity to consume them, and when doing so, exhibit greater risk-seeking behaviour. This has been found in individual decision making experiments when anticipated wealth effects have been controlled, and labelled the “house money effect.” In public good experiments, house money effects could be driving the high levels of voluntary contributions commonly observed. This possibility is tested by comparing VCM contribution rates when subjects supply their own endowments with those when endowments are provided, while holding constant the distribution of promised earnings. No evidence of house money effects is found, suggesting that use of “free” initial money endowments does not distort subsequent contributions in VCM environments.
引用
收藏
页码:223 / 231
页数:8
相关论文
共 44 条
[1]  
Andreoni J.(1988)Why Free Ride? Strategies and Learning in Public Goods Experiments Journal of Public Economics 37 291-304
[2]  
Andreoni J.(1995)Cooperation in Public-Goods Experiments: Kindness or Confusion? American Economic Review 85 891-904
[3]  
Arkes H.(1994)The Psychology of Windfall Gains Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 59 331-347
[4]  
Joyner C.(1990)Testing Between Alternative Models of Choice Under Uncertainty: Some Initial Results Journal of Risk and Uncertainty 3 25-50
[5]  
Pezzo M.(1995)Homegrown Values and Hypothetical Surveys: Is the Dichotomous-Choice Approach Incentive Compatible? American Economic Review 85 260-266
[6]  
Nash J.G.(1996)Social Distance and Other-Regarding Behavior in Dictator Games American Economic Review 86 653-660
[7]  
Siegel-Jacobs K.(1984)Divergent Evidence on Free Riding:AnExperimental Examination of Possible Explanations Public Choice 43 113-149
[8]  
Stone E.(1992)Examining Risk Preferences Under High Monetary Incentives: Experimental Evidence from the People's Republic of China American Economic Review 82 1120-1141
[9]  
Battalio R.(1996)Gambling with the House Money in Capital Expenditure Decisions Economic Letters 50 105-110
[10]  
Kagel J.(1985)The Relative Size of Windfall Income and the Permanent Income Hypothesis Journal of Business and Economic Statistics 3 209-215