Title of article
It takes two to cheat: An experiment on derived trust
Author/Authors
Bigoni، نويسنده , , Maria and Bortolotti، نويسنده , , Stefania and Casari، نويسنده , , Marco and Gambetta، نويسنده , , Diego، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
18
From page
129
To page
146
Abstract
Social life offers innumerable instances in which trust decisions involve multiple agents. Of particular interest is the case when a breach of trust is not profitable if carried out in isolation, but requires an agreement among agents. In such situations the pattern of behaviors is richer than in dyadic games, because even opportunistic trustees who would breach trust when alone may act trustworthily based on what they believe to be the predominant course of action. Anticipating this, trusters may be more inclined to trust. We dub these motivations derived trustworthiness and derived trust. To capture them, we design a “Collective Trust Game” and study it by means of a laboratory experiment. We report that overall levels of trustworthiness are almost thirty percentage points higher when derived motivations are present, and this generates also higher levels of trust. In our set-up, the effects of derived trustworthiness are comparable in size to positive reciprocity, and more important than concerns for equality.
Keywords
Reciprocity , Collective trust , Trust game , Inequality aversion , coordination
Journal title
European Economic Review
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
European Economic Review
Record number
1799050
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