In this paper we introduce the “extortion game” and propose a set of experiments aimed at studying both the extorter’s and the victim’s behavior. The primary focus of our experiments is understanding what determines both the extent of the extortive request and the victim’s reaction in terms of compliance. Our results show that the extorter’s requests are proportional to the victim’s earnings, similar across victims and positively correlated with the level of request the extorter perceives as “fair”. Punishment is rare and the extorted sums are rather small. Results also shed light on the motivations that make a victim compliant with extortive requests, confirming that punishment plays a role in promoting compliance, but also showing the im...
This paper presents evidence that the willingness to punish an unfair action is sensitive to whether...
Assuming rationality of profit maximising agents, various economic models made specific and testable...
We use a two-person 3-stage game to investigate whether people choose to punish or reward another pl...
In this paper we introduce the \u201cextortion game\u201d and propose a set of experiments aimed at ...
We conduct laboratory experiments to study peer effects on compliance with extortive requests. To th...
Extortion is the practice of obtaining advantages through explicit forces and threats. Recently, it ...
We explores the motivations behind costly punishment in social dilemmas, specifically focusing on re...
In the Ultimatum Game, a proposer suggests how to split a sum of money with a responder. If the resp...
Previous theorizing about punishment has suggested that humans desire to punish inequality per se. H...
Cooperative strategies are predicted for repeated social interactions. The recently described Zero D...
This paper demonstrates, through a controlled experiment, that the “Laffer curve” phenomenon does no...
This work focuses on costly punishment imposed by unaffected observing third parties in economic exp...
Previous theorizing about punishment has suggested that humans desire to punish inequality per se. H...
Identifying the motives underpinning punishment is crucial for understanding its evolved function. I...
In the experimental game designed by GÜTH et al. [2007], player 1 has promised to render a service t...
This paper presents evidence that the willingness to punish an unfair action is sensitive to whether...
Assuming rationality of profit maximising agents, various economic models made specific and testable...
We use a two-person 3-stage game to investigate whether people choose to punish or reward another pl...
In this paper we introduce the \u201cextortion game\u201d and propose a set of experiments aimed at ...
We conduct laboratory experiments to study peer effects on compliance with extortive requests. To th...
Extortion is the practice of obtaining advantages through explicit forces and threats. Recently, it ...
We explores the motivations behind costly punishment in social dilemmas, specifically focusing on re...
In the Ultimatum Game, a proposer suggests how to split a sum of money with a responder. If the resp...
Previous theorizing about punishment has suggested that humans desire to punish inequality per se. H...
Cooperative strategies are predicted for repeated social interactions. The recently described Zero D...
This paper demonstrates, through a controlled experiment, that the “Laffer curve” phenomenon does no...
This work focuses on costly punishment imposed by unaffected observing third parties in economic exp...
Previous theorizing about punishment has suggested that humans desire to punish inequality per se. H...
Identifying the motives underpinning punishment is crucial for understanding its evolved function. I...
In the experimental game designed by GÜTH et al. [2007], player 1 has promised to render a service t...
This paper presents evidence that the willingness to punish an unfair action is sensitive to whether...
Assuming rationality of profit maximising agents, various economic models made specific and testable...
We use a two-person 3-stage game to investigate whether people choose to punish or reward another pl...