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Shaping beliefs in experimental markets for expert services: Guilt aversion and the impact of promises and money-burning options
Affiliation:1. Department of Economics, University of Innsbruck, Austria;2. Department of Economics, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands;3. Department of Public Finance, University of Innsbruck, Austria;4. Department of Economics, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Abstract:In a credence goods game with an expert and a consumer, we study experimentally the impact of two devices that are predicted to induce consumer-friendly behavior if the expert has a propensity to feel guilty when he believes that he violates the consumerʼs payoff expectations: (i) an opportunity for the expert to make a non-binding promise; and (ii) an opportunity for the consumer to burn money. In belief-based guilt aversion theory the first opportunity shapes an expertʼs behavior if an appropriate promise is made and if it is expected to be believed by the consumer; by contrast, the second opportunity might change behavior even though this option is never used along the predicted path. Experimental results confirm the behavioral relevance of (i) but fail to confirm (ii).
Keywords:Credence goods  Belief-dependent preferences  Guilt aversion  Promises  Money burning  Psychological forward induction  Experiments
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