具有与他人相关的优惠的公共产品协议

C. Kolstad
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引用次数: 15

摘要

为什么在不合作看起来是个人理性的情况下会出现合作?这是经济学中至少半个世纪以来的一个问题。在20世纪60年代和70年代,情境是囚徒困境博弈中的合作;20世纪80年代,人们的关注点转向了自愿提供公共产品;在20世纪90年代,在提供跨境污染减少的联盟的背景下,出现了关于公共产品提供联盟形成的文献。问题在于,该理论表明,对公共利益的贡献相当低(甚至为零),而搭便车的现象却很高。实验和经验证据表明,合作水平更高。这是20世纪90年代和最近出现的关于他人偏好(也称为社会偏好)的文献的主要原因。这种偏好往往涉及更高层次的合作(尽管并非总是如此)。本文对联盟、公共产品提供和其他相关偏好的文献有所贡献。对于标准偏好,投资于公共利益的边际人均回报(MPCR)必须大于1,才能使个人理性。我们发现,Charness-Rabin偏好倾向于降低个人贡献的阈值。我们还发现,Charness-Rabin偏好降低了提供公共产品的代理人联盟的均衡规模。与大多数文献相反,我们将代理人的财富视为异质的。在这种情况下,我们发现联盟中的代理人之间的转移可能是维持合作所必需的(无论偏好的性质如何)。从实验中得出一个例子来说明社会偏好的有效性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Public Goods Agreements with Other-Regarding Preferences
Why cooperation occurs when noncooperation appears to be individually rational has been an issue in economics for at least a half century. In the 1960's and 1970's the context was cooperation in the prisoner's dilemma game; in the 1980's concern shifted to voluntary provision of public goods; in the 1990's, the literature on coalition formation for public goods provision emerged, in the context of coalitions to provide transboundary pollution abatement. The problem is that theory suggests fairly low (even zero) levels of contributions to the public good and high levels of free riding. Experiments and empirical evidence suggests higher levels of cooperation. This is a major reason for the emergence in the 1990's and more recently of the literature on other-regarding preferences (also known as social preferences). Such preferences tend to involve higher levels of cooperation (though not always). This paper contributes to the literature on coalitions, public good provision and other-regarding preferences. For standard preferences, the marginal per capita return (MPCR) to investing in the public good must be greater than one for contributing to be individually rational. We find that Charness-Rabin preferences tend to reduce this threshold for individual contributions. We also find that Charness-Rabin preferences reduce the equilibrium size of a coalition of agents formed to provide the public good. In contrast to much of the literature, we treat the wealth of agents as heterogeneous. In such cases, we find that transfers among agents of the coalition may be necessary to sustain cooperation (regardless of the nature of preferences). An example drawn from experiments is provided as an illustration of the effectiveness of social preferences.
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