We study self-selection into earning money in an honest or dishonest fashion based on individuals’ attitudes toward truthful reporting. We propose a decision-theoretic framework where individuals’ willingness to pay for honest earnings is determined by their (behavioral) lying costs. Our laboratory experiment identifies lying costs as the decisive factor causing self-selection into honest earning opportunities for individuals with high costs and into cheating opportunities for those prepared to misreport. Our experimental setup allows us to recover individual lying costs and their distribution in the population
This paper introduces a new task to elicit individual aversion to deceiving, defined as the lowest p...
Recent research suggests that refraining from cheating in tempting situations requires self-control,...
In this paper we experimentally explore how lying changes when its consequences are not certain. We ...
We study the structure of intrinsic lying costs and how they interact with incentives. In the first ...
In this paper we present a new design which allows us to draw inferences on the distribution of lyin...
Contains fulltext : 228466.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)We extend the...
Psychological accounts of dishonesty propose that lying incurs subjective costs due to threatening i...
We consider a lie-catching experiment with 9240 judgements. A set of videotapes shows subjects parti...
We introduce a new method for measuring the decision to lie in experiments. In the game, the decisio...
This research examines whether and why people manoeuvre their unethical behaviour so as to maximize ...
In many situations, people can lie strategically for their own benefit. Since individuals differ wit...
Private information is at the heart of many economic activities. For decades, economists have assume...
The paper reports from an experiment studying how the aversion to lying is affected by non-economic ...
A central assumption of the canonical cheap talk literature is that people misreport their private i...
This paper studies lying. An agent randomly picks a number from a known distribution. She can then r...
This paper introduces a new task to elicit individual aversion to deceiving, defined as the lowest p...
Recent research suggests that refraining from cheating in tempting situations requires self-control,...
In this paper we experimentally explore how lying changes when its consequences are not certain. We ...
We study the structure of intrinsic lying costs and how they interact with incentives. In the first ...
In this paper we present a new design which allows us to draw inferences on the distribution of lyin...
Contains fulltext : 228466.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)We extend the...
Psychological accounts of dishonesty propose that lying incurs subjective costs due to threatening i...
We consider a lie-catching experiment with 9240 judgements. A set of videotapes shows subjects parti...
We introduce a new method for measuring the decision to lie in experiments. In the game, the decisio...
This research examines whether and why people manoeuvre their unethical behaviour so as to maximize ...
In many situations, people can lie strategically for their own benefit. Since individuals differ wit...
Private information is at the heart of many economic activities. For decades, economists have assume...
The paper reports from an experiment studying how the aversion to lying is affected by non-economic ...
A central assumption of the canonical cheap talk literature is that people misreport their private i...
This paper studies lying. An agent randomly picks a number from a known distribution. She can then r...
This paper introduces a new task to elicit individual aversion to deceiving, defined as the lowest p...
Recent research suggests that refraining from cheating in tempting situations requires self-control,...
In this paper we experimentally explore how lying changes when its consequences are not certain. We ...