Donors often use the services of an intermediary to prevent their donations from being too thinly distributed over multiple public projects. We explore whether donors’ willingness to coordinate their funds via an intermediary depends on the extent of the intermediary’s discretion over their contributions, as well as the organizational overhead costs incurred by the intermediary. We investigate this using a laboratory experiment in which donors face multiple identical threshold public goods and the opportunity to coordinate their contributions via another donor assigned to the role of intermediary. In line with standard game theoretic predictions, we find that donors make use of the intermediary only when they know she is heavily restricted ...
Any trust situation involves a certain amount of risk for trustors that trustees could abuse. In som...
Suggested contributions, membership categories, and discrete, incremental thank-you gifts are device...
This paper shows moral decision making is not well predicted by the overall fairness of an act but r...
Donors often use the services of an intermediary to prevent their donations from being too thinly di...
When multiple charities, social programs and community projects simultaneously vie for funding, dono...
Donors often rely on local intermediaries to deliver benefits to target beneficiaries. Each selected...
Charitable donations are often made through intermediaries who can fund themselves from these sam...
Donors often rely on local intermediaries to deliver benefits to target beneficiaries. Each selected...
We investigate experimentally whether the endowment of potential contributors changes the success ra...
We present results from an experiment with multiple public goods, where each good produces benefits ...
Donors often rely on local intermediaries to deliver benefits to target beneficiaries. Each selected...
We present results from an experiment with multiple public goods, where each good produces benefits ...
Abstract. We present results from an experiment with multiple public goods, where each good produces...
We present results from an experiment with multiple public goods, where each good produces benefits ...
International audienceWe study embezzlement when donations have to pass through intermediaries to re...
Any trust situation involves a certain amount of risk for trustors that trustees could abuse. In som...
Suggested contributions, membership categories, and discrete, incremental thank-you gifts are device...
This paper shows moral decision making is not well predicted by the overall fairness of an act but r...
Donors often use the services of an intermediary to prevent their donations from being too thinly di...
When multiple charities, social programs and community projects simultaneously vie for funding, dono...
Donors often rely on local intermediaries to deliver benefits to target beneficiaries. Each selected...
Charitable donations are often made through intermediaries who can fund themselves from these sam...
Donors often rely on local intermediaries to deliver benefits to target beneficiaries. Each selected...
We investigate experimentally whether the endowment of potential contributors changes the success ra...
We present results from an experiment with multiple public goods, where each good produces benefits ...
Donors often rely on local intermediaries to deliver benefits to target beneficiaries. Each selected...
We present results from an experiment with multiple public goods, where each good produces benefits ...
Abstract. We present results from an experiment with multiple public goods, where each good produces...
We present results from an experiment with multiple public goods, where each good produces benefits ...
International audienceWe study embezzlement when donations have to pass through intermediaries to re...
Any trust situation involves a certain amount of risk for trustors that trustees could abuse. In som...
Suggested contributions, membership categories, and discrete, incremental thank-you gifts are device...
This paper shows moral decision making is not well predicted by the overall fairness of an act but r...