When punishment fails: Research on sanctions, intentions and non-cooperation |
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Authors: | Daniel Houser Erte Xiao Kevin McCabe Vernon Smith |
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Affiliation: | aInterdisciplinary Center for Economic Science, Department of Economics, and Center for the Study of Neuroecononmics, George Mason University, 4400 University Drive, MSN 1B2, Fairfax, VA 22030, USA;bPhilosophy, Politics and Economics Program and Wharton School, USA |
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Abstract: | People can become less cooperative when threatened with sanctions, and previous research suggests both “intentions” and incentives underlie this effect. We report data from an experiment aimed at determining the relative importance of intentions and incentives in producing non-cooperative behavior. Participants play a one-shot investment experiment in pairs. Investors send an amount to trustees, request a return on this investment and, in some treatments, can threaten sanctions to enforce their requests. Decisions by trustees facing threats imposed (or not) by investors are compared to decisions by trustees facing threats imposed (or not) by nature. When not threatened, trustees typically decide to return a positive amount less than the investor requested. When threatened this decision becomes least common. If the request is large relative to the sanction then most trustees return nothing. If the request is small, trustees typically return the requested amount. These results do not vary with investors' intentions. |
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Keywords: | Punishment Cooperation Trust Incentives Intentions Experiment |
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