We document that being spectators (no effect on personal payoffs) and, to a lesser extent, stakeholders without information on relative payoffs, induces subjects who can choose distribution criteria after task performance to prefer rewarding talent (vis à vis effort, chance or strict egalitarianism) after guaranteeing a minimal egalitarian base. Information about distribution of payoffs under different criteria reduces dramatically such choice since most players opt or revise their decision in favor of the criterion which maximizes their own payoff (and, by doing so, end up being farther from the maximin choice). Large part (but not all) of the stakeholders’ choices before knowing the payoff distribution are driven by their performance beli...
The meritocratic fairness ideal implies that inequalities in earnings are regarded as fair only when...
A core question in the contemporary debate on distributive justice is how the fair distribution of i...
We conduct a laboratory experiment where third-party spectators can redistribute resources between t...
This article de nes in a precise manner three di erent mechanisms to achieve impartiality in distrib...
We study experimentally to what extent distributive fairness decisions by impartial authorities are ...
We examined in two experiments the impact of the roles that people enact (allocator or recipient) an...
We examined in two experiments the impact of the roles that people enact (allocator or recipient) an...
We examined in two experiments the impact of the roles that people enact (allocator or recipient) an...
We examined in two experiments the impact of the roles that people enact (allocator or recipient) an...
We examined in two experiments the impact of the roles that people enact (allocator or recipient) an...
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Journal of P...
We devise a randomized experiment using task performance in which players (acting as spectators/ st...
Inaccurate beliefs about procedural fairness often motivate people to act in self-serving and selfis...
Inaccurate beliefs about procedural fairness often motivate people to act in self-serving and selfis...
A core question in the contemporary debate on distributive justice is how the fair distribution of i...
The meritocratic fairness ideal implies that inequalities in earnings are regarded as fair only when...
A core question in the contemporary debate on distributive justice is how the fair distribution of i...
We conduct a laboratory experiment where third-party spectators can redistribute resources between t...
This article de nes in a precise manner three di erent mechanisms to achieve impartiality in distrib...
We study experimentally to what extent distributive fairness decisions by impartial authorities are ...
We examined in two experiments the impact of the roles that people enact (allocator or recipient) an...
We examined in two experiments the impact of the roles that people enact (allocator or recipient) an...
We examined in two experiments the impact of the roles that people enact (allocator or recipient) an...
We examined in two experiments the impact of the roles that people enact (allocator or recipient) an...
We examined in two experiments the impact of the roles that people enact (allocator or recipient) an...
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Journal of P...
We devise a randomized experiment using task performance in which players (acting as spectators/ st...
Inaccurate beliefs about procedural fairness often motivate people to act in self-serving and selfis...
Inaccurate beliefs about procedural fairness often motivate people to act in self-serving and selfis...
A core question in the contemporary debate on distributive justice is how the fair distribution of i...
The meritocratic fairness ideal implies that inequalities in earnings are regarded as fair only when...
A core question in the contemporary debate on distributive justice is how the fair distribution of i...
We conduct a laboratory experiment where third-party spectators can redistribute resources between t...