Studies on crowding out document that incentives sometimes backfire—decreasing motivation in prosocial tasks. In the present research, we demonstrated an additional channel through which incentives can be harmful. Incentivized advocates for a cause are perceived as less sincere than nonincentivized advocates and are ultimately less effective in persuading other people to donate. Further, the negative effects of incentives hold only when the incentives imply a selfish motive; advocates who are offered a matching incentive (i.e., who are told that the donations they successfully solicit will be matched), which is not incompatible with altruism, perform just as well as those who are not incentivized. Thus, incentives may affect prosocial outco...
This study investigates the interaction of motivations among contributors to online crowdfunding cam...
Many argue that paying people for good behavior can crowd out beneficial motivations like altruism. ...
We test whether and, if so, how incentives to promote pro-social behavior affect the extent to which...
Studies on crowding out document that incentives sometimes backfire—decreasing motivation in prosoci...
Monetary incentives are often used to motivate individuals\u27 pro-social behavior. However, incenti...
We develop a theory of prosocial behavior that combines heterogeneity in individual altruism and gre...
We examine how extrinsic incentives affect blood donations through the analysis of 14,000 Red Cross ...
Economists recognize that monetary incentives can backre through the crowding-out of moral and socia...
The design of effective incentive schemes that are both successful in motivating employees and keepi...
There has been much research on prosocial behavior, especially on factors that increase prosocial be...
This dissertation studies the effectiveness of various non-monetary incentives in encouraging econom...
Recent shortages in the supply of blood donations have renewed the interest in how blood donations c...
Abstract. Economists recognize that monetary incentives can backfire through the crowding-out of mor...
This paper develops a model of two phenomena that have been claimed by psychologists and experimenta...
We present evidence from a natural field experiment involving nearly 100,000 individuals on the effe...
This study investigates the interaction of motivations among contributors to online crowdfunding cam...
Many argue that paying people for good behavior can crowd out beneficial motivations like altruism. ...
We test whether and, if so, how incentives to promote pro-social behavior affect the extent to which...
Studies on crowding out document that incentives sometimes backfire—decreasing motivation in prosoci...
Monetary incentives are often used to motivate individuals\u27 pro-social behavior. However, incenti...
We develop a theory of prosocial behavior that combines heterogeneity in individual altruism and gre...
We examine how extrinsic incentives affect blood donations through the analysis of 14,000 Red Cross ...
Economists recognize that monetary incentives can backre through the crowding-out of moral and socia...
The design of effective incentive schemes that are both successful in motivating employees and keepi...
There has been much research on prosocial behavior, especially on factors that increase prosocial be...
This dissertation studies the effectiveness of various non-monetary incentives in encouraging econom...
Recent shortages in the supply of blood donations have renewed the interest in how blood donations c...
Abstract. Economists recognize that monetary incentives can backfire through the crowding-out of mor...
This paper develops a model of two phenomena that have been claimed by psychologists and experimenta...
We present evidence from a natural field experiment involving nearly 100,000 individuals on the effe...
This study investigates the interaction of motivations among contributors to online crowdfunding cam...
Many argue that paying people for good behavior can crowd out beneficial motivations like altruism. ...
We test whether and, if so, how incentives to promote pro-social behavior affect the extent to which...