Do you do what you say or do you do what you say others do?

Carlsson, Fredrik
Daruvala, Dinky
Jaldell, Henrik
2008-06-12T06:08:12Z
2008-06-12T06:08:12Z
2008-06-12T06:08:12Z
We design a donations vs. own money choice experiment comparing three different treatments. In two of the treatments the pay-offs are hypothetical. In the first of these, a short cheap talk script was used, and subjects were required to state their own preferences in this scenario. In the second, subjects were asked to state how they believed an average student would respond to the choices. In the third treatment the pay-offs were real, allowing us to use the results to compare the validity of the two hypothetical treatments. We find a strong hypothetical bias in both hypothetical treatments where the marginal willingness to pay for donations are higher when subjects state their own preferences but lower when subjects state what they believe are other students preferences. The explanation is probably a self-image effect in both cases. We find that it is mainly women who are prone to hypothetical bias in this study.en
Department of Economicsen
University of Gothenburg. School of Business, Economics and Lawen
1403-2465
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/10296
engen
Working Papers in Economicsen
309en
Stated preferencesen
cheap talken
hypothetical biasen
third person approachen
choice experimenten
Do you do what you say or do you do what you say others do?en
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