Publication | Open Access
Inequality Aversion, Efficiency, and Maximin Preferences in Simple Distribution Experiments
1.2K
Citations
84
References
2004
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingChoice TheoryRelative ImportanceRevealed PreferenceChoice ModelBiasManagementExperimental EconomicsEconomic AnalysisInequality AversionMechanism DesignDecision TheoryStatisticsEconomicsPublic PolicyFair Resource AllocationFair DivisionPreference AggregationEfficiency ConcernsMaximin PreferencesBehavioral EconomicsAlgorithmic FairnessBusinessPreference ElicitationDecision ScienceMicroeconomics
We present simple one-shot distribution experiments comparing the relative importance of efficiency concerns, maximin preferences, and inequality aversion, as well as the relative performance of the fairness theories by Gary E Bolton and Axel Ockenfels and by Ernst Fehr and Klaus M. Schmidt. While the Fehr-Schmidt theory performs better in a direct comparison, this appears to be due to being in line with maximin preferences. More importantly, we find that a combination of efficiency concerns, maximin preferences, and selfishness can rationalize most of the data while the Bolton-Ockenfels and Fehr-Schmidt theories are unable to explain important patterns.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1