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Visibility of Contributions and Cost of Information: An Experiment on Public Goods

This study investigates the impact of visibility of contributions and cost of information on public goods provision. Results show that displaying all contributors, even if it is costly, is more effective in increasing contributions compared to displaying only top contributors.

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Visibility of Contributions and Cost of Information: An Experiment on Public Goods

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  1. Economic Science Association World Meetings 2010 Visibility of Contributions and Cost of Information: An Experiment on Public Goods Roman M. Sheremeta Chapman University Anya C. Savikhin The University of Chicago Vernon Smith Experimental Economics Laboratory, Purdue University

  2. Motivation • Recommendation from existing literature for increasing contributions: recognize all contributors in easily accessible location(Andreoni and Petrie, 2004; Rege and Telle, 2004) • Too many contributors and this becomes difficult

  3. Visibility of Information • Charities may publicize names of largest donors – this may also introduce some degree of competition between contributors concerned about prestige • Less costly to view • Donors who contribute small amounts are not recognized • All names could be publicized but this list is long (Yahoo) • Costly to view • All donors (even small amounts) are recognized • Contribution: Is it more effective to recognize all contributors (but this information may not be visible), or recognize only top contributors?

  4. Experimental Design • Procedures • z-Tree 3.3.6 (Fischbacher, 2007) • Subjects earned $14 each on average (20 francs = $1, 2 periods selected for payment) • Session lasted for about 45-60 minutes • Public Goods Game (VCM) (Groves and Ledyard, 1977) • Fixed matching into groups of 5 participants , same groups for entire session (20 periods) • Endowment of 80 experimental francs per period • MPCR = 0.4 • End of each round: ranked members and display contribution of each member

  5. Digital photos with name to identify subjects to one another (similar to Andreoni and Petrie, 2004)

  6. Results: Overview • Result 1: A significantly increases contributions relative to N • Result 2: T increases contributions only marginally relative to N • Result 3: AC does not have a significant effect on contributions as compared to A  with 20 periods and 40 individuals in the AC treatment, the number of times photos are viewed is 74/800 (9.2%).

  7. Leaders, Laggards, Prestige, Guilt • “Leaders” set an example by contributing a lot • Any individual who contributed 75%+ of endowment in the 1st period • “Laggards” contribute little • Any individual who contributed 25%- of endowment in the 1st period • Prestige effect: Causes to contribute large amounts of endowment if I am recognized – more “leaders” • Guilt effect: Causes to contribute if my small amount is recognized – fewer “laggards” 7

  8. Prestige and Guilt ✔ ✘ ✔☝ ✔ ✔ • Result 4:T not statistically significantly different in leaders or laggards relative to N • Result 5:A increases leaders & decreases laggards relative to N. • Result 6:AC similar in leaders as A, but significantly more laggards than A 8

  9. Overall Distribution of Contributions 9

  10. “Followers” • The “social interaction effect” increases contributions of followers given more leaders, and decreases contributions of followers given more laggards

  11. Conclusions • Replicates previous findings that revealing identities significantly increases overall contributions • We find that display of all information, even if it is costly to view, is more effective than displaying only top contributors • By increasing proportion of leaders and decreasing proportion of laggards • This causes contributions by followers to increase • Designers of online community groups and charities should display full information, even if it is costly to view

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