Psychological ownership, group affiliation and other-regarding behaviour: Some evidence from dictator games

Priyodorshi Banerjee , Sujoy Chakravarty
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

We find that dictator giving is higher in group environments, where the dictator and recipient share a common group affiliation, and the funds are group-owned, than in the benchmark individual environment, where the dictator and recipient do not share a group affiliation, and the funds are owned by the dictator. A move to the group environment from the individual environment involves two distinct shifts: one, a shift in affiliation, where the dictator gives to a group member, rather than just a randomly matched partner out of his own fund, and, two, a shift in ownership, where the dictator gives out of group-owned rather than personal funds, in either case to a group member. We implemented these two shifts through linguistic framing of instructions. Our results show that,although simple group framing does lead to a somewhat higher give rate, group framing combined with joint psychological ownership of the endowment leads to significantly higher average offers in the dictator game.

心理所有权、群体归属和他人行为:来自独裁者游戏的一些证据
我们发现独裁者捐赠在群体环境中更高,在群体环境中,独裁者和接受者拥有共同的群体关系,资金为群体所有,而在基准个人环境中,独裁者和接受者没有共同的群体关系,资金为独裁者所有。从个人环境向群体环境的转变涉及两个明显的转变:一是隶属关系的转变,独裁者从自己的资金中给一个群体成员,而不是随机匹配的伙伴;二是所有权的转变,独裁者从群体拥有的资金中给一个群体成员,而不是个人资金,无论哪种情况下都是这样。我们通过指令的语言框架来实现这两种转变。我们的研究结果表明,虽然简单的群体框架确实会导致更高的捐赠率,但在独裁者博弈中,群体框架与共同的心理禀赋所有权相结合,会导致显著更高的平均捐赠。
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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