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Anomalous behavior in public goods experiments: How much
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1997
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingField ExperimentConsumer ResearchSocial InfluenceBehavioral Game TheorySocial SciencesExperimental FinanceBehavioral FinanceExperimental EconomicsEconomic AnalysisVoluntary Contributions ExperimentsConsumer ChoiceEconomicsBehavioral SciencesAltruismFinancePrivate ConsumptionBehavioral EconomicsAnomalous BehaviorBusinessFinancial Decision-makingAltruism EffectMicroeconomicsIncentive Model
The authors report the results of voluntary contributions experiments where subjects are randomly assigned different rates of return from their private consumption. These random assignments are changed round to round, enabling the measurement of individual player contribution rates as a function of that player's investment cost. The authors directly test these response functions for the presence of warm-glow and/or altruism effects. They find significant evidence for heterogeneous warm-glow effects that are, on average, low in magnitude. The authors statistically reject the presence of an altruism effect. Copyright 1997 by American Economic Association.