Publication | Closed Access
Doing Good or Doing Well? Image Motivation and Monetary Incentives in Behaving Prosocially
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Citations
42
References
2009
Year
Image Motivation—the DesireBehaving ProsociallyBehavioral Decision MakingMonetary IncentivesSocial PsychologySocial InfluenceSocial SciencesPsychologyMedia EffectsMedia PsychologyBehavioral SciencesMotivationAltruismApplied Social PsychologyPublic Service MotivationBehavioral EconomicsSocial BiasImage MotivationProsocial BehaviorSocial BehaviorArtsIncentive Model
This paper experimentally examines image motivation—the desire to be liked and well regarded by others—as a driver in prosocial behavior (doing good), and asks whether extrinsic monetary incentives (doing well) have a detrimental effect on prosocial behavior due to crowding out of image motivation. Using the unique property of image motivation—its dependency on visibility—we show that image is indeed an important part of the motivation to behave prosocially, and that extrinsic incentives crowd out image motivation. Therefore, monetary incentives are more likely to be counterproductive for public prosocial activities than for private ones. (JEL D64, L31, Z13)
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