We investigate how burden sharing rules may impact the voluntary provision of a public good which generates heterogeneous benefits to agents. We compare different rule-based contribution schemes that are based on the principle of the smallest common denominator: all agents can suggest a minimum provision level of the public good that is allocated across agents according to some predetermined rule. We find that rule-based contribution schemes significantly increase payoff levels relative to the VCM. Important differences exist between the rules. Contrary to theory predictions, the equal-payoff rule Pareto-dominates all other rules. This also holds relative to a scheme where different types of players separately can determine their minimum co...
This paper provides a new explanation for the observed differences in the levels of public good prov...
We extend the model of voluntary contributions to multiple public goods by allowing for bundling of ...
Contributions to public goods are often unobservable. In order to make contributions visible, volunt...
We investigate how burden sharing rules may impact the voluntary provision of a public good which ge...
In this experiment, we endogenize the choice of which contribution scheme is implemented in a public...
We experimentally test different rule-based contribution mechanisms in a repeated 4-player public go...
This article experimentally examines voluntary contributions when group members' marginal returns to...
We investigate the emergence and enforcement of contribution norms to public goods in homogeneous an...
In this paper, we investigate how the choice environment affects contribution behavior in settings w...
We investigate the emergence and enforcement of contribution norms to public goods in homogeneous an...
This dissertation investigates the effect of complementarity in the private provision of public good...
This article experimentally examines voluntary contributions when group members’ marginal returns to...
We investigate the role of institutional formation on the implementation of a binding minimum contri...
This article experimentally examines voluntary contributions when group members’ marginal returns to...
We extend the model of voluntary contributions to multiple public goods by allowing for bundling of ...
This paper provides a new explanation for the observed differences in the levels of public good prov...
We extend the model of voluntary contributions to multiple public goods by allowing for bundling of ...
Contributions to public goods are often unobservable. In order to make contributions visible, volunt...
We investigate how burden sharing rules may impact the voluntary provision of a public good which ge...
In this experiment, we endogenize the choice of which contribution scheme is implemented in a public...
We experimentally test different rule-based contribution mechanisms in a repeated 4-player public go...
This article experimentally examines voluntary contributions when group members' marginal returns to...
We investigate the emergence and enforcement of contribution norms to public goods in homogeneous an...
In this paper, we investigate how the choice environment affects contribution behavior in settings w...
We investigate the emergence and enforcement of contribution norms to public goods in homogeneous an...
This dissertation investigates the effect of complementarity in the private provision of public good...
This article experimentally examines voluntary contributions when group members’ marginal returns to...
We investigate the role of institutional formation on the implementation of a binding minimum contri...
This article experimentally examines voluntary contributions when group members’ marginal returns to...
We extend the model of voluntary contributions to multiple public goods by allowing for bundling of ...
This paper provides a new explanation for the observed differences in the levels of public good prov...
We extend the model of voluntary contributions to multiple public goods by allowing for bundling of ...
Contributions to public goods are often unobservable. In order to make contributions visible, volunt...