We experimentally study the effects of common fate on voluntary contributions to linear public goods. In each period, earnings are assigned to subjects according to the outcome of a lottery. In ‘common fate’, ‘independent fate’ and ‘rival fate’ treatments, the lottery outcomes of group members are (respectively) positively correlated, stochastically independent and negatively correlated. We observe the highest contributions and strongest reciprocity under common fate. Contrary to the game harmony hypothesis, contributions are not lower under rival fate than under independent fate. Surprisingly, under rival fate, having won the lottery in one period induces higher contributions in the next period
We run a series of experiments in which subjects have to choose their level of contribution to a pur...
Li-Chen Hsu* Abstract: We examine cooperation in threshold public goods and commons games by conside...
Previous experimental and empirical evidence has identified social preferences in the voluntary prov...
We experimentally study the effects of common fate on voluntary contributions to linear public goods...
We design a novel sequential public goods experiment to study reciprocity, or conditional cooperatio...
We run a series of experiments in which subjects have to choose their level of contribution to a pur...
In finitely repeated laboratory public goods games contributions start at about 40 to 60 percent of ...
We run a series of experiments in which subjects have to choose their level of contribution to a pur...
Economic experiments reveal that humans value cooperation and fairness. Punishing unfair behavioris ...
Economic experiments reveal that humans value cooperation and fairness. Punishing unfair behavior is...
Evolution of cooperation has traditionally been studied by assuming that individuals adopt either of...
In a novel experimental design we study dynamic public good games in which wealth is allowed to accu...
Comparative payment schemes and tournament-style promotion mechanisms are pervasive in the workplace...
In most previous studies of public goods game, individuals conventionally donate their contributions...
Understanding the ultimate and proximate mechanisms that favour cooperation remains one of the great...
We run a series of experiments in which subjects have to choose their level of contribution to a pur...
Li-Chen Hsu* Abstract: We examine cooperation in threshold public goods and commons games by conside...
Previous experimental and empirical evidence has identified social preferences in the voluntary prov...
We experimentally study the effects of common fate on voluntary contributions to linear public goods...
We design a novel sequential public goods experiment to study reciprocity, or conditional cooperatio...
We run a series of experiments in which subjects have to choose their level of contribution to a pur...
In finitely repeated laboratory public goods games contributions start at about 40 to 60 percent of ...
We run a series of experiments in which subjects have to choose their level of contribution to a pur...
Economic experiments reveal that humans value cooperation and fairness. Punishing unfair behavioris ...
Economic experiments reveal that humans value cooperation and fairness. Punishing unfair behavior is...
Evolution of cooperation has traditionally been studied by assuming that individuals adopt either of...
In a novel experimental design we study dynamic public good games in which wealth is allowed to accu...
Comparative payment schemes and tournament-style promotion mechanisms are pervasive in the workplace...
In most previous studies of public goods game, individuals conventionally donate their contributions...
Understanding the ultimate and proximate mechanisms that favour cooperation remains one of the great...
We run a series of experiments in which subjects have to choose their level of contribution to a pur...
Li-Chen Hsu* Abstract: We examine cooperation in threshold public goods and commons games by conside...
Previous experimental and empirical evidence has identified social preferences in the voluntary prov...