Using data from an experiment conducted in 70 Colombian communities, we investigate who pools risk with whom when trust is crucial to enforce risk pooling arrangements. We explore the roles played by risk attitudes and social networks. Both theoretically and empirically, we find that close friends and relatives group assortatively on risk attitudes and are more likely to join the same risk pooling group, while unfamiliar participants group less and rarely assort. These findings indicate that where there are advantages to grouping assortatively on risk attitudes those advantages may be inaccessible when trust is absent or low. JEL Classification Numbers: C93; D71; D81; O12
International audienceDecisions under risk are often embedded in a social context that we usually ab...
There is a growing interest in the literature that focuses on the relationship between individual’s ...
We run a laboratory experiment were friendship networks are generated endogenously within an anonymo...
Using data from an experiment conducted in 70 Colombian communities, we investigate who pools risk w...
This paper first investigates empirically the relationship between risk aversion and social network ...
In this article the authors examine the motivation behind the formation of risk pools. They do so by...
We build a model of informal risk-sharing in social networks, where connections be-tween individuals...
Abstract. When communities engage in risk-sharing with asymmetric information, wherein a member of a...
Risk taking is typically viewed through a lens of individual deficits (e.g., impulsivity) or normati...
Risk taking is typically viewed through a lens of individual deficits (e.g., impulsivity) or normati...
Social identification predicts many important phenomena; however, its determinants have received com...
The literature on social preferences provides overwhelming evidence of departures from pure self-int...
This paper describes and analyzes the results of a unique field experiment especially designed to te...
This paper considers the formation of risk-sharing networks. Following empirical findings, we build ...
This paper studies how the structure of friendship networks affects risk sharing in villages. Using ...
International audienceDecisions under risk are often embedded in a social context that we usually ab...
There is a growing interest in the literature that focuses on the relationship between individual’s ...
We run a laboratory experiment were friendship networks are generated endogenously within an anonymo...
Using data from an experiment conducted in 70 Colombian communities, we investigate who pools risk w...
This paper first investigates empirically the relationship between risk aversion and social network ...
In this article the authors examine the motivation behind the formation of risk pools. They do so by...
We build a model of informal risk-sharing in social networks, where connections be-tween individuals...
Abstract. When communities engage in risk-sharing with asymmetric information, wherein a member of a...
Risk taking is typically viewed through a lens of individual deficits (e.g., impulsivity) or normati...
Risk taking is typically viewed through a lens of individual deficits (e.g., impulsivity) or normati...
Social identification predicts many important phenomena; however, its determinants have received com...
The literature on social preferences provides overwhelming evidence of departures from pure self-int...
This paper describes and analyzes the results of a unique field experiment especially designed to te...
This paper considers the formation of risk-sharing networks. Following empirical findings, we build ...
This paper studies how the structure of friendship networks affects risk sharing in villages. Using ...
International audienceDecisions under risk are often embedded in a social context that we usually ab...
There is a growing interest in the literature that focuses on the relationship between individual’s ...
We run a laboratory experiment were friendship networks are generated endogenously within an anonymo...