1 / 7

Normative reflection in a public good experiment

Normative reflection in a public good experiment. Karen Evelyn Hauge ESA Rome June 2007. Background. Public good situations: My choice effects your possibilities “How should I behave?”-> Moral motivation Norms guide behavior Norm salience (ex: Cialdini, 1990)

Download Presentation

Normative reflection in a public good experiment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Normative reflection in a public good experiment Karen Evelyn Hauge ESA Rome June 2007

  2. Background • Public good situations: • My choice effects your possibilities • “How should I behave?”-> Moral motivation • Norms guide behavior • Norm salience (ex: Cialdini, 1990) • Public good experiment where subjects are induced to reflect on normative aspect of situation

  3. Experimental design • Public good game experiment • 3 treatments • Control: standard (16 subjects) • Recursive: 10 repetitions, groups of 4 • Between subject design • T1: Unconditional moral question (20 subjects) • “In your personal opinion, what is the ethically right thing to do? How many units should you contribute to the group project?” • T2: Conditional moral question (20 subjects) • “...If other group members on average contribute the following rounded amounts, how many units should you contribute?”

  4. Results: Reported Moral Ideals • Unconditional moral question • 15/20 subjects state ideal is 10 • 5/20 subjects state ideal is between 3 and 8 • Conditional moral question • 4/20 unconditional ideals • 9/20 exactly the average of others • 5/20 ideals depends positively on average of others • 2/20 random

  5. Average contributions by period

  6. Individual average contributions, comparing • Control are T1: significant difference (p=0.0446), • Control and T2: not significant difference (p=0.1147) • T1 and T2: not significant difference (p=0.5880) • Regression results • Sign coeff: ideal, dummy for T1 and T2, dummy for period 9 and 10, age.

  7. Conclusion • 1. Normative reflection has a • positive and significant impact on contribution behavior in a public goods experiment, when unconditional moral question • Positive but not significant impact when conditiotional moral question • Norm salience as a policy instrument • Few observations • Future research should look into anchoring effect and effect on expectations

More Related