Discussion Papers

Discussion Paper No. 1
January 7, 2017

You Owe Me

Author:

Klaus M. Schmidt (University of Munich)
Ulrike Malmendier (University of California at Berkeley)

Abstract:

In business and politics, gifts are often aimed at influencing the recipient at the expense of third parties. In an experimental study, which removes informational and incentive confounds, subjects strongly respond to small gifts even though they understand the gift giver’s intention. Our findings question existing models of social preferences. They point to anthropological and sociological theories about gifts creating an obligation to reciprocate. We capture these effects in a simple extension of existing models. We show that common policy responses (disclosure, size limits) may be ineffective, consistent with our model. Financial incentives are effective but can backfire.

Keywords:

gift exchange; externalities; lobbyism; corruption; reciprocity; social preferences;

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Discussion Paper No. 203
October 22, 2021

Belief Updating: Does the 'Good-News, Bad-News' Asymmetry Extend to Purely Financial Domains?

Author:

Kai Barron (WZB Berlin)

Abstract:

Bayes' statistical rule remains the status quo for modeling belief updating in both normative and descriptive models of behavior under uncertainty. Some recent research has questioned the use of Bayes' rule in descriptive models of behavior, presenting evidence that people overweight 'good news' relative to 'bad news' when updating ego-relevant beliefs. In this paper, we present experimental evidence testing whether this 'good-news, bad-news' effect is present in a financial decision making context (i.e. a domain that is important for understanding much economic decision making). We find no evidence of asymmetric updating in this domain. In contrast, in our experiment, belief updating is close to the Bayesian benchmark on average. However, we show that this average behavior masks substantial heterogeneity in individual updating. We find no evidence in support of a sizeable subgroup of asymmetric updators.

Keywords:

economic experiments; bayes' rule; belief updating; belief measurement; proper scoring rule; motivated beliefs;

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