Publication | Open Access
Gender Differences in the Response to Decision Power and Responsibility—Framing Effects in a Dictator Game
15
Citations
45
References
2018
Year
Gendered PerceptionBehavioral Decision MakingChoice TheoryGame TheoryLawIndividual Decision MakingPolitical BehaviorBehavioral Game TheoryAutonomySocial SciencesDemocracyGender StudiesManagementDecision TheoryDifferent FramesGendered ContextGender DifferencesDictator GameCoercionGamesDecision PowerAccountabilityDecision ScienceAllocation DecisionPolitical Science
This paper studies the effects of two different frames on decisions in a dictator game. Before making their allocation decision, dictators read a short text. Depending on the treatment, the text either emphasizes their decision power and freedom of choice or it stresses their responsibility for the receiver’s payoff. Including a control treatment without such a text, three treatments are conducted with a total of 207 dictators. Our results show a different reaction to these texts depending on the dictator’s gender. We find that only men react positively to a text that stresses their responsibility for the receiver, while only women seem to react positively to a text that emphasizes their decision power and freedom of choice.
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