Punishment Cannot Sustain Cooperation in a Public Good Game with Free-Rider Anonymity
Abstract
Individuals often have legitimate but publicly unobservable reasons
for not partaking in cooperative social endeavours. This means others
who lack legitimate reasons may then have the opportunity to behave
uncooperatively, i.e. free-ride, and be indistinguishable from those with
legitimate reasons. Free-riders have a degree of anonymity. In the context
of a public good game we consider the e¤ect of free-rider anonymity on
the ability of voluntary punishment to sustain cooperative social norms.
Despite only inducing a weak form of free-rider anonymity, punishment
falls and cannot sustain cooperation.
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Date
2010-05-19Author
Patel, Amrish
Cartwright, Edward
van Vugt, Mark
Keywords
Anonymity
free-riding
public goods experiment
punishment
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
451
Language
eng