Title |
A Bargaining Experiment to Motivate Discussion on Fairness
|
Author |
David L. Dickinson |
Category
|
Welfare Economics: Allocative Efficiency, Externalities, Fairness, Altruism
|
Type |
Non-computerized experiment |
Description |
The author presents a classroom version of the popular research game
called the Ultimatum Game. Researchers are placing growing importance on how
fairness affects behavior, and this experiment provides a useful, fun, and engaging
way in which a day or two of class time can be spent on the topic. The appendix
contains all of the materials necessary to conduct this experiment, and the
experiment can highlight several items of interest for the instructor. First, different
individuals place different subjective weights on concerns for fairness versus
money. Second, theories that incorporate concerns for fairness into agents' preferences
can often explain behavior better than those that do not. Finally, when it
is relatively cheap to purchase fairness (or equality) individuals purchase more of
it. The classroom results can motivate discussion of a downward sloping demand
curve for fairness. |
URL |
http://www.indiana.edu/~econed/pdffiles/spring02/dickinson.pdf |
Home URL |
http://www.indiana.edu/~econed |