Shaping beliefs in experimental markets for expert services: Guilt aversion and the impact of promises and money-burning options |
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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 |
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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). |
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Keywords: | Credence goods Belief-dependent preferences Guilt aversion Promises Money burning Psychological forward induction Experiments |
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