The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favors the proposer, and paradoxically, it disadvantages voters further if they are inequity averse. In practice, however, outcomes are equitable. The present paper analyzes data from a novel experimental design to identify the underlying social preferences. Our experiment compares one-shot and indefinite horizon versions of random-proposer majority bargaining (the Baron-Ferejohn game) which allow us to disentangle behaviors compatible with altruism, inequity aversion, and reference dependent altruism. Most subjects are classified as reference-dependent altruists, around 10% are inequity averse. Subjects are egoistic when their payoff is below th...
Are "generous" bargaining offers made out of fairness or in fear of rejection? We disentangle risk a...
Mounting evidence shows that there is heterogeneity in aversion to inequality, i.e. that some people...
We elicit distributional fairness ideals of impartial spectators using an incentivized experiment in...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
Research on the formal properties of democratic aggregation mechanisms has a long tradition in polit...
The so-called chaos theorems imply that, under most preference configurations, majority voting in n-...
WP 2006-22 October 2006JEL Classification Codes: C91; C92; D64; D72; H41Recent papers show that in g...
AbstractSome people have a concern for a fair distribution of incomes while others do not. Does such...
Some people have a concern for a fair distribution of incomes while others do not. Does such a conce...
Are "generous" bargaining offers made out of fairness or in fear of rejection? We disentangle risk a...
Mounting evidence shows that there is heterogeneity in aversion to inequality, i.e. that some people...
We elicit distributional fairness ideals of impartial spectators using an incentivized experiment in...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
The common use of majority rule in group decision making is puzzling. In theory, it inequitably favo...
Research on the formal properties of democratic aggregation mechanisms has a long tradition in polit...
The so-called chaos theorems imply that, under most preference configurations, majority voting in n-...
WP 2006-22 October 2006JEL Classification Codes: C91; C92; D64; D72; H41Recent papers show that in g...
AbstractSome people have a concern for a fair distribution of incomes while others do not. Does such...
Some people have a concern for a fair distribution of incomes while others do not. Does such a conce...
Are "generous" bargaining offers made out of fairness or in fear of rejection? We disentangle risk a...
Mounting evidence shows that there is heterogeneity in aversion to inequality, i.e. that some people...
We elicit distributional fairness ideals of impartial spectators using an incentivized experiment in...