Laboratory studies allow studying the predictors of bribe-taking in a controlled setting. However, presently used laboratory tasks often lack any connection to norm violation or invite participants to role-play. A new experimental task for studying the decision to take a bribe was designed in this study to overcome these problems by embedding the opportunity for bribe-taking in an unrelated task that participants perform. Using this new experimental task, we found that refraining from harming a third party by taking a bribe was associated with lower offered bribes and higher scores of the participants on the honesty-humility scale from the HEXACO personality inventory. A trial-level analysis showed that response times were longer for trials...
This paper analyzes social norms in corruption by exploring whether engagement in bribery induces co...
This paper examines the effectiveness of corruption control depending upon whether the bribe taker o...
Previous experiments have shown that the possibility to punish liars does not per se increase honest...
Corruption is ubiquitous in practice and has severe negative consequences for organizations and soci...
This article investigates the impact of trust on bribery. We measure trust with a survey question fr...
We experimentally investigate behavioral drivers of bribery, focusing on the role of self-interest, ...
Corruption is ubiquitous in practice and has severe negative consequences for businesses and societi...
Despite substantial research on cheating, how and when individual predispositions figure into cheati...
Bribery involves individuals exchanging material benefits for a service of a public institution. To ...
We report a sequential bribery game to disentangle the effect of descriptive social norms among publ...
The study analyzes the propensity to engage in and to punish corrupt behavior in a three-person sequ...
We argue that personal (e.g., age, gender and education) and circumstantial (e.g., bureaucratic rank...
In most bribery games in the literature, there is no mention of rights and duties associated to part...
The large negative impact of corruption on all areas of individuals’ lives suggests that it is vital...
Bribery is a complex phenomenon rooted in both individual motives and the greater institutional cont...
This paper analyzes social norms in corruption by exploring whether engagement in bribery induces co...
This paper examines the effectiveness of corruption control depending upon whether the bribe taker o...
Previous experiments have shown that the possibility to punish liars does not per se increase honest...
Corruption is ubiquitous in practice and has severe negative consequences for organizations and soci...
This article investigates the impact of trust on bribery. We measure trust with a survey question fr...
We experimentally investigate behavioral drivers of bribery, focusing on the role of self-interest, ...
Corruption is ubiquitous in practice and has severe negative consequences for businesses and societi...
Despite substantial research on cheating, how and when individual predispositions figure into cheati...
Bribery involves individuals exchanging material benefits for a service of a public institution. To ...
We report a sequential bribery game to disentangle the effect of descriptive social norms among publ...
The study analyzes the propensity to engage in and to punish corrupt behavior in a three-person sequ...
We argue that personal (e.g., age, gender and education) and circumstantial (e.g., bureaucratic rank...
In most bribery games in the literature, there is no mention of rights and duties associated to part...
The large negative impact of corruption on all areas of individuals’ lives suggests that it is vital...
Bribery is a complex phenomenon rooted in both individual motives and the greater institutional cont...
This paper analyzes social norms in corruption by exploring whether engagement in bribery induces co...
This paper examines the effectiveness of corruption control depending upon whether the bribe taker o...
Previous experiments have shown that the possibility to punish liars does not per se increase honest...