The role of beliefs, trust, and risk in contributions to a public good

Kocher, Martin G.
Martinsson, Peter
Matzat, Dominik
Wollbrant, Conny
2011-01-12T14:41:13Z
2011-01-12T14:41:13Z
2011-01
This paper experimentally investigates the role of beliefs, trust, and risk in shaping cooperative behavior. By applying incentivized elicitation methods to measure these concepts, we find that beliefs about others’ behavior and trust are positively associated with cooperation in a public goods game. However, even though contributing unconditionally to a public good resembles a situation of making decisions under risk, elicited risk preferences do not seem to explain cooperation in a systematic way.sv
1403-2465
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/24123
engsv
Working Papers in Economicssv
482sv
Public goodssv
cooperationsv
risk preferencessv
trustsv
experimentsv
The role of beliefs, trust, and risk in contributions to a public goodsv
Textsv
reportsv

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