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A fundraising mechanism inspired by historical tontines: Theory and experimental evidence
Authors:Andreas Lange  John A List  Michael K Price
Institution:a AREC, The University of Maryland, 2200 Symons Hall, College Park, MD 20742-5535, United States
b ZEW, Germany
c Department of Economics, University of Chicago, United States
d NBER, United States
e ARE, University of Nevada Reno, United States
Abstract:The tontine, which is an interesting mixture of group annuity, group life insurance, and lottery, has a peculiar place in economic history. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries it played a major role in raising funds to finance public goods in Europe, but today it is rarely encountered outside of a dusty footnote in actuarial course notes or as a means to thicken the plot of a murder mystery. This study provides a formal model of individual contribution decisions under a modern variant of the historical tontine mechanism that is easily implemented by private charities. Our model incorporates desirable properties of the historical tontine to develop a mechanism to fund the private provision of a public good. The tontine-like mechanism we derive is predicted to outperform not only the voluntary contribution mechanism but also another widely used mechanism: charitable lotteries. Our experimental test of the instrument provides some evidence of the beneficial effects associated with implementing tontine-like schemes. We find that the mechanism has particular power in cases where agents are risk-averse or in situations where substantial asymmetries characterize individual preferences for the public good.
Keywords:H41 (Public Goods)  C91 (Design of Experiments)
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