We elicit reciprocal preferences in a firm-worker gift-exchange setting and relate them to actual behavior in a repeated gift-exchange game. We find that only a small minority of 10 percent of workers is materially selfish whereas 90 percent exhibit reciprocal preferences. However, the intensity of reciprocal preferences is weak in the sense that firms maximize profits by not relying on gift-exchange but by offering the lowest possible wage. Workers behavior in the repeated gift-exchange game is predicted by their elicited preferences, but the correlation between preferences and behavior is imperfect. Together with profit maximizing behavior of firms these observations can explain the observed unraveling of gift-exchange over time in our ex...
We report a gift exchange experiment in which we systematically vary the following experimental desi...
Recent laboratory evidence suggests that personality traits, in particular social preferences, may a...
"Recent evidence highlights the importance of social norms in many economic relations. However, many...
We elicit reciprocal preferences in a firm-worker gift-exchange setting and relate them to actual be...
We elicit reciprocal preferences in a firm-worker gift-exchange setting and relate them to actual be...
We investigate to what extent reciprocal considerations, exhibited by employers and employees, lead ...
Numerous economic experiments suggest that a substantial part of individuals exhibit reciprocal pref...
We study the intrapersonal relationship between trust and reciprocity in a laboratory experiment. Re...
This paper reports results of an experiment designed to analyze whether reciprocal behavior survives...
Abstract: One of the outstanding results of three decades of laboratory market research is that unde...
We report the results from three distinct experiments, conducted in the Netherlands and in the Unite...
We study the role of reciprocity in a labor market field experiment. In a recent paper, Gneezy and L...
Empirical work on Akerlof’s theory of gift exchange in labor markets has concentrated on the fair wa...
In this article, we study a three-person gift exchange, where two workers compete for a bonus. We de...
Fehr, Kirchsteiger and Riedl experimentally test a labor market in which worker effort levels are ch...
We report a gift exchange experiment in which we systematically vary the following experimental desi...
Recent laboratory evidence suggests that personality traits, in particular social preferences, may a...
"Recent evidence highlights the importance of social norms in many economic relations. However, many...
We elicit reciprocal preferences in a firm-worker gift-exchange setting and relate them to actual be...
We elicit reciprocal preferences in a firm-worker gift-exchange setting and relate them to actual be...
We investigate to what extent reciprocal considerations, exhibited by employers and employees, lead ...
Numerous economic experiments suggest that a substantial part of individuals exhibit reciprocal pref...
We study the intrapersonal relationship between trust and reciprocity in a laboratory experiment. Re...
This paper reports results of an experiment designed to analyze whether reciprocal behavior survives...
Abstract: One of the outstanding results of three decades of laboratory market research is that unde...
We report the results from three distinct experiments, conducted in the Netherlands and in the Unite...
We study the role of reciprocity in a labor market field experiment. In a recent paper, Gneezy and L...
Empirical work on Akerlof’s theory of gift exchange in labor markets has concentrated on the fair wa...
In this article, we study a three-person gift exchange, where two workers compete for a bonus. We de...
Fehr, Kirchsteiger and Riedl experimentally test a labor market in which worker effort levels are ch...
We report a gift exchange experiment in which we systematically vary the following experimental desi...
Recent laboratory evidence suggests that personality traits, in particular social preferences, may a...
"Recent evidence highlights the importance of social norms in many economic relations. However, many...