We test whether and, if so, how incentives to promote pro-social behavior affect the extent to which it spills over to subsequent charitable giving. To do so, we conduct a two-period artefactual field experiment to study repeated donation decisions of more than 700 participants. We vary how participants’ first pro-social behavior is incentivized by a wide range of fundraising interventions ranging from soft to hard paternalism. Our design allows us to decompose spillover effects into a pure spillover effect, which identifies the impact of previous pro-social behavior on subsequent donation decisions and a crowding effect, which captures the extent to which the spillover effects are affected by the incentives exerted on the previous pro-so...
Prior studies of sequential moral behaviors suggest that when people believe they have made a moral ...
Social consequences of charitable giving have been highlighted by researchers as key determinants of...
Blood donations are increasingly important for medical procedures, while meeting demand is challengi...
We test whether and, if so, how incentives to promote pro-social behavior affect the extent to which...
People can often contribute to prosocial causes by several means; for instance, environmentally frie...
We study intertemporal crowding between two fundraising campaigns for the same charitable organizati...
We study how other-regarding behavior extends to environments with income uncertainty and conditiona...
We examine how extrinsic incentives affect blood donations through the analysis of 14,000 Red Cross ...
We present evidence from a natural field experiment involving nearly 100,000 individuals on the effe...
We examine whether spillovers of pro-social behavior depend on how behavioral changes are induced. W...
This study develops theory and conducts natural field experiments to provide an understanding of why...
In this paper we study the effect of social influence in the voluntary provision of public goods in ...
Prior studies of sequential moral behaviors suggest that when people believe they have made a moral ...
This thesis contributes to the economic literature on prosocial behavior. It includes three papers, ...
Subsidizing charitable giving, for example, for victims of natural disasters, is very popular, not o...
Prior studies of sequential moral behaviors suggest that when people believe they have made a moral ...
Social consequences of charitable giving have been highlighted by researchers as key determinants of...
Blood donations are increasingly important for medical procedures, while meeting demand is challengi...
We test whether and, if so, how incentives to promote pro-social behavior affect the extent to which...
People can often contribute to prosocial causes by several means; for instance, environmentally frie...
We study intertemporal crowding between two fundraising campaigns for the same charitable organizati...
We study how other-regarding behavior extends to environments with income uncertainty and conditiona...
We examine how extrinsic incentives affect blood donations through the analysis of 14,000 Red Cross ...
We present evidence from a natural field experiment involving nearly 100,000 individuals on the effe...
We examine whether spillovers of pro-social behavior depend on how behavioral changes are induced. W...
This study develops theory and conducts natural field experiments to provide an understanding of why...
In this paper we study the effect of social influence in the voluntary provision of public goods in ...
Prior studies of sequential moral behaviors suggest that when people believe they have made a moral ...
This thesis contributes to the economic literature on prosocial behavior. It includes three papers, ...
Subsidizing charitable giving, for example, for victims of natural disasters, is very popular, not o...
Prior studies of sequential moral behaviors suggest that when people believe they have made a moral ...
Social consequences of charitable giving have been highlighted by researchers as key determinants of...
Blood donations are increasingly important for medical procedures, while meeting demand is challengi...