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Conditional Cooperation: Evidence for the Role of Self-Control

Abstract
When facing the opportunity to allocate resources between oneself and others, individuals may experience a self-control conflict between urges to act selfishly and preferences to act pro-socially. We explore the domain of conditional cooperation, and we test the hypothesis that increased expectations about others’ average contribution increases own contributions to public goods more when self-control is high than when it is low. We pair a subtle framing technique with a public goods experiment. Consistent with our hypothesis, we find that conditionally cooperative behavior is stronger (i.e., less imperfect) when expectations of high contributions are accompanied by high levels of self-control.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/23048
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  • Working papers
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gupea_2077_23048_4.pdf (395.8Kb)
Date
2010-07
Author
Martinsson, Peter
Myrseth, Kristian Ove R.
Wollbrant, Conny
Keywords
Self-control
Pro-social behavior
Public good experiment
Conditional cooperation
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
459
Language
eng
Metadata
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