Economic Experiments on Behavior, Beliefs and Preferences
Författare
Summary, in English
This dissertation consists of four independent papers, which share the use of experimental methods. Using different settings – the field, the lab, an online platform, and telephone interviews – I study economic behavior and its underpinning beliefs and preferences.
The first paper investigates how an incentive for a hedonic but risky activity affects the risk assessment of young adults. I conduct a field experiment and show that when offered a voucher for a café visit during the COVID19 pandemic, young adults not only visit that café more often, but also start to convince themselves that the risk of a café visit is low. They downplay the risk in anticipation of the visit and in the absence of information that would justify an assessment update. This finding contradicts Bayesian updating theory but is consistent with the notion of motivated reasoning.
In the second paper, we conduct two online experiments to study the demand for genderrelated affirmative action (AA). We document evidence that around one third of our subjects who act as employers choose a to hire workers using a female quota, which guarantees that at least one of two vacant positions is filled with a woman. Surprisingly, this result is stable across three treatment conditions despite varying costs to employ the quota and varying beliefs about the productivity of workers. We interpret this finding as evidence for an inelastic demand.
My third paper seeks to solve an empirical puzzle: How does time affect prosocial behavior? I begin by conducting a metaanalysis collecting 14 experiments that addressed this question but report strikingly mixed evidence. This allows me to compare design features that were kept constant within the experiments but may have moderated their treatment effects. I identify repeated interaction as a potential moderator. In a second step, I test this feature in a controlled donation experiment that is set up through telephone interviews to mimic a fundraiser. The results of that experiment do not support the intuition of my meta study. I do not find that repeated interaction reinforces or alleviates the effect of time on donations.
In the fourth paper, we analyze the drivers of time discounting. We conduct a lab experiment and show that people discount lotteries less than their certainty equivalents. Next, we exploit this variation to structurally estimate parameters of two important drivers: Future uncertainty and impatience. We find that more than 70%of the observed time discounting can be explained by an aversion against future uncertainty. This contradicts the common interpretation of the discount factor as a measure of impatience.
The first paper investigates how an incentive for a hedonic but risky activity affects the risk assessment of young adults. I conduct a field experiment and show that when offered a voucher for a café visit during the COVID19 pandemic, young adults not only visit that café more often, but also start to convince themselves that the risk of a café visit is low. They downplay the risk in anticipation of the visit and in the absence of information that would justify an assessment update. This finding contradicts Bayesian updating theory but is consistent with the notion of motivated reasoning.
In the second paper, we conduct two online experiments to study the demand for genderrelated affirmative action (AA). We document evidence that around one third of our subjects who act as employers choose a to hire workers using a female quota, which guarantees that at least one of two vacant positions is filled with a woman. Surprisingly, this result is stable across three treatment conditions despite varying costs to employ the quota and varying beliefs about the productivity of workers. We interpret this finding as evidence for an inelastic demand.
My third paper seeks to solve an empirical puzzle: How does time affect prosocial behavior? I begin by conducting a metaanalysis collecting 14 experiments that addressed this question but report strikingly mixed evidence. This allows me to compare design features that were kept constant within the experiments but may have moderated their treatment effects. I identify repeated interaction as a potential moderator. In a second step, I test this feature in a controlled donation experiment that is set up through telephone interviews to mimic a fundraiser. The results of that experiment do not support the intuition of my meta study. I do not find that repeated interaction reinforces or alleviates the effect of time on donations.
In the fourth paper, we analyze the drivers of time discounting. We conduct a lab experiment and show that people discount lotteries less than their certainty equivalents. Next, we exploit this variation to structurally estimate parameters of two important drivers: Future uncertainty and impatience. We find that more than 70%of the observed time discounting can be explained by an aversion against future uncertainty. This contradicts the common interpretation of the discount factor as a measure of impatience.
Avdelning/ar
Publiceringsår
2022
Språk
Engelska
Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie
Lund Economic Studies
Issue
230
Dokumenttyp
Doktorsavhandling
Förlag
Lund University
Ämne
- Economics
Nyckelord
- Field Experiment
- Motivated Reasoning
- Risk Preferences
- Time Preferences
- Lab Experiment
- Intertemporal Choice
- Prosocial Behavior
- Repeated Interaction
- Affirmative Action
- Discrimination
- Gender
Aktiv
Published
Handledare
ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt
- ISBN: 9789180392037
- ISBN: 9789180392044
Försvarsdatum
3 juni 2022
Försvarstid
10:15
Försvarsplats
EC3:211
Opponent
- Thomas Epper (Professor)