We study the role of culture on bribing attitudes in a new dynamic bribery game, where the purpose of bribing is to receive a service earlier by bribing to queue-jump. Our queue-jumping game allows us to distinguish between two classes of bribes: (i) queue-jumping bribes, which aim to increase the briber's expected earnings by jumping the queue, and (ii) counter bribes, which aim to maintain the briber's expected earnings by upholding the current order in the queue. In a laboratory experiment, comprised of four treatments that differ in the number of Greeks and Germans in each group, we analyze both cross-cultural and inter-cultural differences in bribing attitudes. In our cross-cultural treatments, we find that Greeks tend to bribe more of...
Bribery is a complex phenomenon rooted in both individual motives and the greater institutional cont...
This paper discovers significant differences between southern and north-ern Europeans in a dynamic v...
First published online: 12 October 2020This paper studies how social ties interact with bribery and ...
The study analyzes the propensity to engage in and to punish corrupt behavior in a three-person sequ...
Explicit incentives are assumed to improve performance, but the motivation crowding out theory sugge...
Corruption often creates a "briber's dilemma": each of the "clients" competing for a rent allocated ...
A paper presented by Abraham Waithima, Daystar University and Justine Burns University of Cape town ...
This paper reports the findings of a meta-analysis of 37 papers with 75 results from ultimatum game ...
none2siDo individuals consider bribery as an acceptable behavior? We use a newly-designed game to st...
Harassment bribes, paid by citizens to corrupt officers for services the former are legally entitled...
This paper examines cultural differences in individual decision-making in a corruption game. We defi...
This paper investigates the effect of differences in sex, age, ethnicity and residency on the willin...
We report a sequential bribery game to disentangle the effect of descriptive social norms among publ...
Bribery is a complex phenomenon rooted in both individual motives and the greater institutional cont...
Harassment bribes, paid by citizens to corrupt officers for services the former are legally entitled...
Bribery is a complex phenomenon rooted in both individual motives and the greater institutional cont...
This paper discovers significant differences between southern and north-ern Europeans in a dynamic v...
First published online: 12 October 2020This paper studies how social ties interact with bribery and ...
The study analyzes the propensity to engage in and to punish corrupt behavior in a three-person sequ...
Explicit incentives are assumed to improve performance, but the motivation crowding out theory sugge...
Corruption often creates a "briber's dilemma": each of the "clients" competing for a rent allocated ...
A paper presented by Abraham Waithima, Daystar University and Justine Burns University of Cape town ...
This paper reports the findings of a meta-analysis of 37 papers with 75 results from ultimatum game ...
none2siDo individuals consider bribery as an acceptable behavior? We use a newly-designed game to st...
Harassment bribes, paid by citizens to corrupt officers for services the former are legally entitled...
This paper examines cultural differences in individual decision-making in a corruption game. We defi...
This paper investigates the effect of differences in sex, age, ethnicity and residency on the willin...
We report a sequential bribery game to disentangle the effect of descriptive social norms among publ...
Bribery is a complex phenomenon rooted in both individual motives and the greater institutional cont...
Harassment bribes, paid by citizens to corrupt officers for services the former are legally entitled...
Bribery is a complex phenomenon rooted in both individual motives and the greater institutional cont...
This paper discovers significant differences between southern and north-ern Europeans in a dynamic v...
First published online: 12 October 2020This paper studies how social ties interact with bribery and ...