Guilt from Promise-Breaking and Trust in Markets for Expert Services – Theory and Experiment
Abstract
We examine the influence of guilt and trust on the performance of
credence goods markets. An expert can make a promise to a consumer first, whereupon the consumer can express her trust by paying an interaction
price before the expert's provision and charging decisions. We argue
that the expert's promise induces a commitment that triggers guilt if the
promise is broken, and guilt is exacerbated by higher interaction prices. An
experiment qualitatively confirms our predictions: (1) most experts make
the predicted promise; (2) proper promises induce consumer-friendly behavior;
and (3) higher interaction prices increase the commitment value of
proper promises.
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Date
2010-03-17Author
Beck, Adrian
Kerschbamer, Rudolf
Qiu, Jianying
Sutter, Matthias
Keywords
Promises
Guilt
Trust
Credence Goods
Experts
Reciprocity
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
436
Language
eng