Private information is at the heart of many economic activities. For decades, economists have assumed that individuals are willing to misreport private information if this maximizes their material payoff. We combine data from 90 experimental studies in economics, psychology and sociology, and show that, in fact, people lie surprisingly little. We then formalize a wide range of potential explanations for the observed behavior, identify testable predictions that can distinguish between the models and conduct new experiments to do so. Our empirical evidence suggests that a preference for being seen as honest and a preference for being honest are the main motivations for truth-telling
The paper reports from an experiment studying how the aversion to lying is affected by non-economic ...
Asymmetric information in economic relationships often provides incentives to deceive. Previous find...
This thesis contains three chapters employing controlled economic experiments. The first chapter stu...
Private information is at the heart of many economic activities. For decades, economists have assume...
AbstractA central assumption in economics is that people misreport their private information if this...
Recent experimental evidence suggests that some people dislike telling lies, and tell the truth eve...
A recent experimental literature shows that truth-telling is not always motivated by pecuniary moti...
This paper reconsiders the evidence on lying or deception presented in Gneezy (2005,American Economi...
In this paper we present a new design which allows us to draw inferences on the distribution of lyin...
A central assumption of the canonical cheap talk literature is that people misreport their private i...
This thesis investigates preferences for honesty in economic experiments. Preferences for honesty ha...
This paper studies individual truth-telling behavior in the presence of multiple lying opportunities...
Erat and Gneezy (2012) conduct an experiment to test whether people avoid lying in a situation where...
We report results from an experiment that investigates truthfulness in self-reporting under differen...
This dissertation consists of three self-contained articles. In the first chapter ``Lying Aversion a...
The paper reports from an experiment studying how the aversion to lying is affected by non-economic ...
Asymmetric information in economic relationships often provides incentives to deceive. Previous find...
This thesis contains three chapters employing controlled economic experiments. The first chapter stu...
Private information is at the heart of many economic activities. For decades, economists have assume...
AbstractA central assumption in economics is that people misreport their private information if this...
Recent experimental evidence suggests that some people dislike telling lies, and tell the truth eve...
A recent experimental literature shows that truth-telling is not always motivated by pecuniary moti...
This paper reconsiders the evidence on lying or deception presented in Gneezy (2005,American Economi...
In this paper we present a new design which allows us to draw inferences on the distribution of lyin...
A central assumption of the canonical cheap talk literature is that people misreport their private i...
This thesis investigates preferences for honesty in economic experiments. Preferences for honesty ha...
This paper studies individual truth-telling behavior in the presence of multiple lying opportunities...
Erat and Gneezy (2012) conduct an experiment to test whether people avoid lying in a situation where...
We report results from an experiment that investigates truthfulness in self-reporting under differen...
This dissertation consists of three self-contained articles. In the first chapter ``Lying Aversion a...
The paper reports from an experiment studying how the aversion to lying is affected by non-economic ...
Asymmetric information in economic relationships often provides incentives to deceive. Previous find...
This thesis contains three chapters employing controlled economic experiments. The first chapter stu...