Truth,Trust, and Sanctions: On Institutional Selection in Sender–Receiver Games* |
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Authors: | Ronald Peeters Marc Vorsatz Markus Walzl |
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Affiliation: | 1. Maastricht University, NL‐6200 MD Maastricht, the Netherlands r.peeters@maastrichtuniversity.nl ;2. Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia, 28040 Madrid, Spain;3. and Fundación de Estudios de Economía Aplicada (FEDEA), 28001 Madrid, Spain mvorsatz@cee.uned.es ;4. Innsbruck University, A‐6020 Innsbruck, Austria markus.walzl@uibk.ac.at |
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Abstract: | We have conducted a laboratory experiment to investigate the impact of institutions and institutional choice on truth‐telling and trust in sender–receiver games. We find that in an institution with sanctioning opportunities, receivers sanction predominantly after having trusted lies. Individuals who sanction are responsible for truth‐telling beyond standard equilibrium predictions, and they are more likely to choose the sanctioning institution. Sanctioning and non‐sanctioning institutions coexist if their choice is endogenous, and the former shows a higher level of truth‐telling but lower material payoffs. Our experimental findings are consistent with logit agent quantal response equilibrium with two distinct groups of individuals: one consisting of subjects who experience non‐monetary lying costs as senders and non‐monetary costs when being lied to as receivers, and the other consisting of payoff maximizers. |
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Keywords: | Experiment institutional selection sender– receiver games strategic information transmission A13 C72 Z13 |
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