The importance of moral reflection and self-reported data in a dictator game with production

Publisert i

Social Choice and Welfare 36 (1), 2011, pages 105-120

Sammendrag

This article studies how individual behavior is affected by moral reflection in a dictator game with production. We make individuals reflect on fairness, in a structured way, before they play the dictator game. Our results suggest that moral reflection not only increases the weight people attach to fairness in distributive choices, but also has a strong effect on what people consider fair. Furthermore, we study the informational value of self-reported data. We find that self-reported data have substantial informational value, but do not add explanatory power to a random utility model estimated on purely behavioral data. Finally, we study whether there is a self-serving bias in the participants’ fairness perceptions, but do not find much evidence of this phenomenon in the data.

Fulltekst

By Alexander W. Cappelen, Astri Drange Hole, Erik Ø. Sørensen and Bertil Tungodden
Published June 20, 2011 11:21 AM - Last modified Oct. 25, 2019 10:07 AM