The Fear of Exclusion: Individual Effort when Group Formation is Endogenous

Publisert i

Scandinavian Journal of Economics 109 (3),531-550

Sammendrag

To secure their membership in a popular group, individuals may contribute more to the group's local public good than they would if group formation were exogenous. Those in the most unpopular group do not have this incentive to contribute to their group. Substantial differences in individual efforts levels between groups may be the result. A principal may prefer either exogenous or endogenous group formation, depending on whether an increase in contributions to the local public good coincides with the principal's interests. We analyze two examples: Social interaction in schools, and multiple-task teamwork.
(The link below is an earlier version of this paper)

Fulltekst

By Kjell Arne Brekke, Karine Nyborg, Mari Rege
Published Mar. 14, 2008 1:36 PM - Last modified Mar. 14, 2008 1:40 PM