We find that in market-partners, market experience has adverse effects on the efficiency of cooperation on both market-winner and market-loser pairs. In market-strangers, pairs of market-winners manage to cooperate more efficiently. These results indicate that it is not market experience per se that lowers the ability to cooperate. Rather, having competed for scarce resources on the same side of the market makes it difficult to overcome the social dilemma and positive market experience fosters cooperation only for those who did not have to compete with each other. We also show that differences in cooperation cannot be explained by ex-ante income differences and find that market experience also affects subjective well-being and social value ...
We investigate experimentally whether entry costs have an impact on the evolution of cooperation in ...
It is usually believed that product-market cooperation among the competing firms is detrimental for ...
Abstract A social dilemma appears in the public goods problem, where the individual has to decide wh...
We find that in market-partners, market experience has adverse effects on the efficiency of cooperat...
We experimentally study causal effects of competitive experience in markets with a short and a long ...
Trabajo presentado en los Kent Research seminars organizados por la School of Economics de la Univer...
Trabajo presentado en el 42 Simposio de la Asociación Española de Economía celebrado en Barcelona lo...
This paper experimentally studies the effects of competition in a social dilemma where people’s acti...
We contribute to the experimental literature by examining the causal effect of partner choice opport...
Do competitive markets remove the impact of social norms and customs on market out-comes? Or are the...
Abstract: Do competitive markets remove the impact of social norms and customs on market out-comes? ...
We study the effects of competition in a context in which people's actions can not be contractually ...
Cartels are inherently instable. Each cartelist is best off if it breaks the cartel, while the remai...
In this study, we use the lens of social exchange theory to investigate the influence of incentives o...
We investigate experimentally whether entry costs have an impact on the evolution of cooperation in ...
It is usually believed that product-market cooperation among the competing firms is detrimental for ...
Abstract A social dilemma appears in the public goods problem, where the individual has to decide wh...
We find that in market-partners, market experience has adverse effects on the efficiency of cooperat...
We experimentally study causal effects of competitive experience in markets with a short and a long ...
Trabajo presentado en los Kent Research seminars organizados por la School of Economics de la Univer...
Trabajo presentado en el 42 Simposio de la Asociación Española de Economía celebrado en Barcelona lo...
This paper experimentally studies the effects of competition in a social dilemma where people’s acti...
We contribute to the experimental literature by examining the causal effect of partner choice opport...
Do competitive markets remove the impact of social norms and customs on market out-comes? Or are the...
Abstract: Do competitive markets remove the impact of social norms and customs on market out-comes? ...
We study the effects of competition in a context in which people's actions can not be contractually ...
Cartels are inherently instable. Each cartelist is best off if it breaks the cartel, while the remai...
In this study, we use the lens of social exchange theory to investigate the influence of incentives o...
We investigate experimentally whether entry costs have an impact on the evolution of cooperation in ...
It is usually believed that product-market cooperation among the competing firms is detrimental for ...
Abstract A social dilemma appears in the public goods problem, where the individual has to decide wh...