Group size and label framing: Experimental evidence on cooperative behaviour
Abstract
Cooperation is a fundamental element of human society and essential to tackle the global
challenges we face. This thesis addressed two questions: (1) does cooperation decline with
increasing group size and (2) is cooperation higher when a community label is applied as
opposed to a neutral label? I also conducted two explorative analyses of (1) individual-specific
determinants of cooperation and (2) motives for cooperating or defecting. To fulfil
these aims, I conducted a monetarily incentivized N-person Prisoner’s Dilemma (NPD) experiment
in which the group size was set to 3, 7 or 25, and the NPD was referred to as
“community dilemma” or “dilemma”. No significant group size effect was found, but the
results indicated a negative effect for 25- relative to 3-person groups. No label framing effect
was found. A novel finding was that left-wing voters cooperated more than right-wing voters
and those of other political affiliation. Cooperators were most motivated by efficiency, Kantian
reasoning and fairness, while defectors were most motivated by profitability, zero-profit
avoidance and concerns for a low probability of reaching social optimum.
Degree
Master 2-years
Other description
MSc in Economics
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2018-10-08Author
Sundborg, Ronja
Series/Report no.
Master Degree Project
2018:183
Language
eng