There is robust experimental evidence that some people have selfish preferences, and others have social, or other-regarding, preferences. This paper seeks to explain why there is such preference heterogeneity. In our approach preferences are endogenous to the economy's institutional setup. We consider institutions of the social-dilemma type. Our main result characterizes the endogenous preferences: There is, under a wide set of institutional setups, a unique endogenous preference distribution, where reciprocal, altruistic, and selfish preferences coexist. These results may contribute to understanding how institutions affect preferences
This article analyzes the concept of social preferences and the existing methods for their determina...
The third part, Chapter 6, offers an example of how heterogeneous players affect institutional choic...
We present a brief overview of the experimental economics literature on social preferences. In numer...
Drawing on experimental economics, anthropology, social psychology, sociology, history, the theory o...
The endogeneity of preferences implies that not only individual preferences—along with technologies,...
In recent economic literature, there has been an increasing interest in modelling preferences as end...
We examine the link between social institutions and individuals ’ propensity to cooperate in a simpl...
We report a laboratory experiment that enables us to distinguish preferences for altruism (concernin...
Abstract: We examine the link between social institutions and individuals ' propensity to coop...
We examine the link between social institutions and individuals\u27 propensity to cooperate in a sim...
We suggest that the pragmatist theory of public interest has implications for the contraposition bet...
In this paper we analyze whether social capital can emerge endogenously from a process of preference...
A long-standing discussion in economics asks whether institutions affect people’s social predisposi-...
Heidhues P, Riedel F. Do social preferences matter in competitive markets?. Working Papers. Institut...
This paper presents evidence which challenges the view that techniques which are designed to measure...
This article analyzes the concept of social preferences and the existing methods for their determina...
The third part, Chapter 6, offers an example of how heterogeneous players affect institutional choic...
We present a brief overview of the experimental economics literature on social preferences. In numer...
Drawing on experimental economics, anthropology, social psychology, sociology, history, the theory o...
The endogeneity of preferences implies that not only individual preferences—along with technologies,...
In recent economic literature, there has been an increasing interest in modelling preferences as end...
We examine the link between social institutions and individuals ’ propensity to cooperate in a simpl...
We report a laboratory experiment that enables us to distinguish preferences for altruism (concernin...
Abstract: We examine the link between social institutions and individuals ' propensity to coop...
We examine the link between social institutions and individuals\u27 propensity to cooperate in a sim...
We suggest that the pragmatist theory of public interest has implications for the contraposition bet...
In this paper we analyze whether social capital can emerge endogenously from a process of preference...
A long-standing discussion in economics asks whether institutions affect people’s social predisposi-...
Heidhues P, Riedel F. Do social preferences matter in competitive markets?. Working Papers. Institut...
This paper presents evidence which challenges the view that techniques which are designed to measure...
This article analyzes the concept of social preferences and the existing methods for their determina...
The third part, Chapter 6, offers an example of how heterogeneous players affect institutional choic...
We present a brief overview of the experimental economics literature on social preferences. In numer...