Cooperation under risk and ambiguity
Abstract
The return from investments in public goods is almost always uncertain, in contrast to the most common setup in the existing empirical literature. We study the impact of natural uncertainty on cooperation in a social dilemma by conducting a public goods experiment in the laboratory in which the marginal return to contributions is either deterministic, risky (known probabilities) or ambiguous (unknown probabilities). Our design allows us to make inferences on differences in cooperative attitudes, beliefs, and one-shot as well as repeated contributions to the public good under the three regimes. Interestingly, we do not find that natural uncertainty has a significant impact on the inclination to cooperate, neither on the beliefs of others nor on actual contribution decisions. Our results support the generalizability of previous experimental results based on deterministic settings. From a behavioural point of view, it appears that strategic uncertainty overshadows natural uncertainty in social dilemmas.
Other description
JEL: C91, D64, D81, H41
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2016-12Author
Björk, Lisa
Kocher, Martin
Martinsson, Peter
Nam Khanh, Pham
Keywords
Public good
conditional cooperation
experiment
uncertainty
risk
ambiguity
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
683
Language
eng