Home>Publications>Quantitative Economics>Elicited beliefs and social information in modified dictator games: What do dictators believe other dictators do?
Using data from modified dictator games and a mixture-of-types estimation tech- nique, we find a clear relationship between a classification of subjects into four different types of interdependent preferences (selfish, social welfare maximizers, inequity averse, and competitive) and the beliefs subjects hold about others’ dis- tributive choices in a nonstrategic environment. In particular, selfish individuals fall into false-consensus bias more than other types, as they can hardly conceive that other individuals incur costs so as to change the distribution of payoffs. We also find that selfish individuals are the most robust preference type when repeat- ing play, both when they learn about others’ previous choices (social information) and when they do not, while other preference types are more unstable. Keywords. Interdependent preferences, social welfare maximizing, inequity aversion, belief elicitation, social information, experiments, mixture-of-types models. JEL classification. C72, C91, D81.
MLA
Iriberri, Nagore, and Pedro Rey-Biel. “Elicited beliefs and social information in modified dictator games: What do dictators believe other dictators do?.” Quantitative Economics, vol. 4, .no 3, Econometric Society, 2013, pp. -,
Chicago
Iriberri, Nagore, and Pedro Rey-Biel. “Elicited beliefs and social information in modified dictator games: What do dictators believe other dictators do?.” Quantitative Economics, 4, .no 3, (Econometric Society: 2013), -.
APA
Iriberri, N., & Rey-Biel, P. (2013). Elicited beliefs and social information in modified dictator games: What do dictators believe other dictators do?. Quantitative Economics, 4(3), -.
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