Democratic Punishment in Public Good Games with Perfect and Imperfect Observability

dc.contributor.author

Ambrus, A

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Greiner, B

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2016-12-06T17:54:31Z

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2016-12-06T17:54:31Z

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2015-08-26

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In the context of repeated public good contribution games, we experimentally investigate the impact of democratic punishment, when members of a group decide by majority voting whether to inflict punishment on another member, relative to individual peer-to-peer punishment. Democratic punishment leads to more cooperation and higher average payoffs, both under perfect and imperfect monitoring of contributions, primarily by curbing anti-social punishment and thereby establishing a closer connection between a member’s contribution decision and whether subsequently being punished by others. We also find that participating in a democratic punishment procedure makes even non-contributors’ punishment intentions more pro-social.

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27 pages

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13202

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Economic Research Initiatives at Duke (ERID)

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public good contribution experiments

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punishment

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voting

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Democratic Punishment in Public Good Games with Perfect and Imperfect Observability

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Journal article

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183

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Duke

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Economics

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Trinity College of Arts & Sciences

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