TY - JOUR
T1 - Does heterogeneity spoil the basket? The role of productivity and feedback information on public good provision
AU - Angelovski, Andrej
AU - Di Cagno, Daniela
AU - Güth, Werner
AU - Marazzi, Francesca
AU - Panaccione, Luca
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018
PY - 2018/12
Y1 - 2018/12
N2 - In a circular neighborhood of eight, each member contributes repeatedly to two local public goods, one with the left and one with the right neighbor. All eight two-person games provide only local feedback information and are structurally independent in spite of their overlapping player sets. Heterogeneity is induced intra-personally by asymmetric productivity in left and right games and inter-personally by two randomly selected group members who are less privileged (LP) by being either less productive or excluded from end-of-period feedback information about their payoffs and neighbors’ contributions. Although both LP-types let the neighborhood as a whole evolve less cooperatively, their spillover dynamics differ. While less productive LPs initiate “spoiling the basket” via their low contributions, LPs with no-end-of-round information are exploited by their neighbors. Furthermore, LP-positioning, closest versus most distant, affects how the neighborhood evolves.
AB - In a circular neighborhood of eight, each member contributes repeatedly to two local public goods, one with the left and one with the right neighbor. All eight two-person games provide only local feedback information and are structurally independent in spite of their overlapping player sets. Heterogeneity is induced intra-personally by asymmetric productivity in left and right games and inter-personally by two randomly selected group members who are less privileged (LP) by being either less productive or excluded from end-of-period feedback information about their payoffs and neighbors’ contributions. Although both LP-types let the neighborhood as a whole evolve less cooperatively, their spillover dynamics differ. While less productive LPs initiate “spoiling the basket” via their low contributions, LPs with no-end-of-round information are exploited by their neighbors. Furthermore, LP-positioning, closest versus most distant, affects how the neighborhood evolves.
KW - Behavioral spillovers
KW - Experiment
KW - Heterogeneity
KW - Public goods
KW - Voluntary contribution mechanism
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85054010982
U2 - 10.1016/j.socec.2018.09.006
DO - 10.1016/j.socec.2018.09.006
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85054010982
SN - 2214-8043
VL - 77
SP - 40
EP - 49
JO - Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics
JF - Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics
ER -