Using an incentivized experiment with statistical power, this paper explores the role of stakes in charitable giving of lottery prizes, where subjects commit to donate a fraction of the prize before they learn the outcome of the lottery. We study three stake levels: 5€ (n = 177), 100€ (n = 168), and 1,000€ (n = 171). Although the donations increase in absolute terms as the stakes increase, subjects decrease the donated fraction of the pie. However, people still share roughly 20% of 1,000€, an amount as high as the average monthly salary of people at the age of our subjects. The number of people sharing 50% of the pie is remarkably stable across stakes, but donating the the whole pie–the modal behavior in charity-donation experiments–disappe...
A literature in the social sciences proposes that humans can promote cooperation with strangers by s...
This paper reports the results from a two-person "pledge and give" experiment. Each persons endowmen...
We test whether and, if so, how incentives to promote pro-social behavior affect the extent to which...
Using an incentivized experiment with statistical power, this paper explores the role of stakes in c...
Using an incentivized experiment with statistical power, this paper explores the role of stakes in c...
We present evidence from a natural field experiment involving nearly 100,000 individuals on the effe...
In this paper, we investigate the relationship between earnings and charitable giving, in an environ...
This dissertation presents three experimental studies with an emphasis on peer influence in people’s...
Charities often devise fund-raising strategies that exploit natural human competitiveness in combina...
We study how other-regarding behavior extends to environments with income uncertainty and conditiona...
Subsidizing charitable giving, for example, for victims of natural disasters, is very popular, not o...
Should fundraisers ask a banker to donate “if he earns a bonus” or wait and ask after the bonus is k...
In this dissertation we add two new experimental studies to the growing catalog of non-economic fact...
This study investigates how the relative generosity of an individual to a third party affects recipr...
Every year, 90% of Americans give money to charities. Is such generosity necessarily welfare enhanci...
A literature in the social sciences proposes that humans can promote cooperation with strangers by s...
This paper reports the results from a two-person "pledge and give" experiment. Each persons endowmen...
We test whether and, if so, how incentives to promote pro-social behavior affect the extent to which...
Using an incentivized experiment with statistical power, this paper explores the role of stakes in c...
Using an incentivized experiment with statistical power, this paper explores the role of stakes in c...
We present evidence from a natural field experiment involving nearly 100,000 individuals on the effe...
In this paper, we investigate the relationship between earnings and charitable giving, in an environ...
This dissertation presents three experimental studies with an emphasis on peer influence in people’s...
Charities often devise fund-raising strategies that exploit natural human competitiveness in combina...
We study how other-regarding behavior extends to environments with income uncertainty and conditiona...
Subsidizing charitable giving, for example, for victims of natural disasters, is very popular, not o...
Should fundraisers ask a banker to donate “if he earns a bonus” or wait and ask after the bonus is k...
In this dissertation we add two new experimental studies to the growing catalog of non-economic fact...
This study investigates how the relative generosity of an individual to a third party affects recipr...
Every year, 90% of Americans give money to charities. Is such generosity necessarily welfare enhanci...
A literature in the social sciences proposes that humans can promote cooperation with strangers by s...
This paper reports the results from a two-person "pledge and give" experiment. Each persons endowmen...
We test whether and, if so, how incentives to promote pro-social behavior affect the extent to which...