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Report

Understanding Social Preferences with Simple Tests

Authors:

  • Gary Charness, University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Matthew Rabin, Harvard University

Abstract

Departures from self-interest in economic experiments have recently inspired model s of "social preferences." We design a range of simple experimental games that test these theories more directly than existing experiments. Our experiments show that subjects are more concerned with increasing social welfare-sacrificing to increase the payoffs for all recipients, especially low-payoff recipients-than with reducing differences in payoffs (as supposed in recent models). Subjects are also motivated by reciprocity: they withdraw willingness to sacrifice to achieve a fair outcome when others are themselves unwilling to sacrifice, and sometimes punish unfair behavior.