In this paper we assume that for some commodities individuals may wish to adjust their levels of consumption from their normal Marshallian levels so as to match the consumption levels of a group of other individuals, in order to signal that they conform to the consumption norms of that group. Unlike Veblen’s concept of conspicuous consumption this can mean that some individuals may reduce their consumption of the relevant commodities. We model this as a three-stage game in which individuals first decide whether or not they wish to adhere to a norm, then decide which norm they wish to adhere to, and finally decide their actual consumption. We present a number of examples of the resulting equilibria, and then discuss the potential policy impl...
Recent models of prosociality suggest that cooperation in laboratory games may be better understood ...
The main contribution of this paper is twofold. First of all, it focuses on the decisional process t...
We ask whether conformity, copying the most observed behavior in a population, can affect free ridin...
In this paper we assume that for some commodities individuals may wish to adjust their levels of con...
We present a model of consumer behaviour when consumers value conformity and examine the implication...
Human conduct is often guided by “conformist preferences”, which thrive on behavioral expectations w...
We consider a model of conformity that permits a non-conformist equilibrium and multiple conformist...
This thesis consists of three independent essays on behavioral economic theory. The rst article (C...
Cognitive dissonance causes people to rationalize actions that differ from their own preferences.Con...
We examine a novel class of conformist preferences which falls within the realm of belief-dependent ...
Human conduct is often guided by conformist preferences, with "conformity" being the act of changing...
Compliance with a social norm is a matter of self-enforceability and endogenous motivation to confor...
Conformity behavior, i.e., the agreement between an individual’s choices and the prevailing behavior...
Available online 3 October 2015.This paper studies the aggregate distribution of declared opinions a...
This paper reports on an experiment designed to test whether people’s preferences change to become m...
Recent models of prosociality suggest that cooperation in laboratory games may be better understood ...
The main contribution of this paper is twofold. First of all, it focuses on the decisional process t...
We ask whether conformity, copying the most observed behavior in a population, can affect free ridin...
In this paper we assume that for some commodities individuals may wish to adjust their levels of con...
We present a model of consumer behaviour when consumers value conformity and examine the implication...
Human conduct is often guided by “conformist preferences”, which thrive on behavioral expectations w...
We consider a model of conformity that permits a non-conformist equilibrium and multiple conformist...
This thesis consists of three independent essays on behavioral economic theory. The rst article (C...
Cognitive dissonance causes people to rationalize actions that differ from their own preferences.Con...
We examine a novel class of conformist preferences which falls within the realm of belief-dependent ...
Human conduct is often guided by conformist preferences, with "conformity" being the act of changing...
Compliance with a social norm is a matter of self-enforceability and endogenous motivation to confor...
Conformity behavior, i.e., the agreement between an individual’s choices and the prevailing behavior...
Available online 3 October 2015.This paper studies the aggregate distribution of declared opinions a...
This paper reports on an experiment designed to test whether people’s preferences change to become m...
Recent models of prosociality suggest that cooperation in laboratory games may be better understood ...
The main contribution of this paper is twofold. First of all, it focuses on the decisional process t...
We ask whether conformity, copying the most observed behavior in a population, can affect free ridin...