This article investigates the effect of motivations on the perceived kindness of an action within the context of social indirect reciprocity (if A helps B, then C helps A). We test experimentally the hypothesis that, for a given distributional outcome, an action is perceived by a third party to be less kind if it can be strategically motivated. As a consequence, intentionbased reciprocity should be stronger in the absence of strategic motivations. The results do not support this hypothesis: social indirect reciprocity is found to be less strong when strategic motivations can be ruled out. © 2011 Taylor & Francis.
Stanca, L., Bruni, L., Mantovani, M. (2011). The Effect of Motivations on Social Indirect Reciprocity: an Experimental Analysis. APPLIED ECONOMICS LETTERS, 18(17), 1709-1711 [10.1080/13504851.2011.560105].
The Effect of Motivations on Social Indirect Reciprocity: an Experimental Analysis
STANCA, LUCA MATTEO;Mantovani, M.
2011
Abstract
This article investigates the effect of motivations on the perceived kindness of an action within the context of social indirect reciprocity (if A helps B, then C helps A). We test experimentally the hypothesis that, for a given distributional outcome, an action is perceived by a third party to be less kind if it can be strategically motivated. As a consequence, intentionbased reciprocity should be stronger in the absence of strategic motivations. The results do not support this hypothesis: social indirect reciprocity is found to be less strong when strategic motivations can be ruled out. © 2011 Taylor & Francis.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.