The Gates Effect in Public Goods Experiments: How Donations Flow to the Recipients Favored by the Wealthy

Corazzini Luca, Cotton Christopher, Longo Enrico, Reggiani Tommaso
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引用次数: 20

Abstract

Experiments involving multiple public goods with contribution thresholds capture many features of charitable giving environments in which donors try to coordinate their contributions across various potential recipients. We present results from a laboratory experiment that introduces endowment and preference differences into such a framework to explore the impact of donor heterogeneity on public good success and payoffs. We observe that wealthier donors tend to provide larger contributions to the public goods, and that the contributions of all other donors are most likely directed to the public good preferred by the wealthiest donor as other group members try to coordinate their donations to ensure public good success. We refer to this collective focus on the preferred good of the wealthiest as the Gates Effect. The Gates Effect can reduce inequality among donors groups that succeed in funding a public good; however, it also affects the philanthropic agenda, reducing the variety of public goods that receive funding.
公共物品实验中的盖茨效应:捐赠如何流向富人青睐的接受者
涉及多个具有捐赠阈值的公共产品的实验捕捉到了慈善捐赠环境的许多特征,在这些环境中,捐赠者试图在不同的潜在接受者之间协调他们的捐赠。我们提出了一项实验室实验的结果,该实验将捐赠和偏好差异引入该框架,以探索捐赠者异质性对公共产品成功和回报的影响。我们观察到,更富有的捐赠者倾向于为公共物品提供更大的捐款,而所有其他捐赠者的捐款最有可能指向最富有的捐赠者所偏好的公共物品,因为其他团体成员试图协调他们的捐款,以确保公共物品的成功。我们把这种集体关注最富有的人的首选商品的现象称为“盖茨效应”。盖茨效应可以减少成功资助公共产品的捐赠团体之间的不平等;然而,它也影响了慈善议程,减少了接受资助的公共产品的种类。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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