People exhibit peer-induced fairness concerns when they look to their peers as a reference to evaluate their endowments. We analyze two independent ultimatum games played sequentially by a leader and two followers. With peer-induced fairness, the second follower is averse to receiving less than the first follower. Using laboratory experimental data, we estimate that peer-induced fairness between followers is two times stronger than distributional fairness between leader and follower. Allowing for heterogeneity, we find that 50 percent of subjects are fairness-minded. We discuss how peer-induced fairness might limit price discrimination, account for low variability in CEO compensation, and explain pattern bargaining
The evolution of fairness in dyadic relationships has been studied using ultimatum games. However, h...
I investigated the effect of the presence of a group of non-active subjects upon the behavior of act...
<div><p>Background</p><p>The aim of this study was to determine whether people respond differently t...
People exhibit peer-induced fairness concerns when they look to their peers as a reference to evalua...
I wish to thank my students in Econ 411 at the American University in Cairo, for planning, organisi...
Non-cooperative game theory predicts that Allocators in Ultimatum games will take almost all the &ap...
This article belongs to the Special Issue Fairness in Games.The relationship between risk in the env...
The emergence and impact of fairness is commonly studied in the context of 2-person games, notably t...
Research in experimental economics suggests that decision making in strategic interactions is often ...
A burgeoning literature in economics has started examining the role of social norms in explaining ec...
In the Ultimatum Game, two players are offered a chance to win a certain sum of money. All they must...
A burgeoning literature in economics has started examining the role of social norms in explaining ec...
Individuals do not only make decisions to maximize their own utility, but are also concerned with ho...
Abstract: We conduct experiments on three threshold public good provision games (simultaneous game,...
The relationship between risk in the environment, risk aversion and inequality aversion is not well ...
The evolution of fairness in dyadic relationships has been studied using ultimatum games. However, h...
I investigated the effect of the presence of a group of non-active subjects upon the behavior of act...
<div><p>Background</p><p>The aim of this study was to determine whether people respond differently t...
People exhibit peer-induced fairness concerns when they look to their peers as a reference to evalua...
I wish to thank my students in Econ 411 at the American University in Cairo, for planning, organisi...
Non-cooperative game theory predicts that Allocators in Ultimatum games will take almost all the &ap...
This article belongs to the Special Issue Fairness in Games.The relationship between risk in the env...
The emergence and impact of fairness is commonly studied in the context of 2-person games, notably t...
Research in experimental economics suggests that decision making in strategic interactions is often ...
A burgeoning literature in economics has started examining the role of social norms in explaining ec...
In the Ultimatum Game, two players are offered a chance to win a certain sum of money. All they must...
A burgeoning literature in economics has started examining the role of social norms in explaining ec...
Individuals do not only make decisions to maximize their own utility, but are also concerned with ho...
Abstract: We conduct experiments on three threshold public good provision games (simultaneous game,...
The relationship between risk in the environment, risk aversion and inequality aversion is not well ...
The evolution of fairness in dyadic relationships has been studied using ultimatum games. However, h...
I investigated the effect of the presence of a group of non-active subjects upon the behavior of act...
<div><p>Background</p><p>The aim of this study was to determine whether people respond differently t...