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Coordinating on Good and Bad Outcomes in Threshold Games -- Evidence from an Artefactual Field Experiment in Cambodia

by Esther Schuch, Andries Richter, Tum Nhim ยท 2022

ISBN:  Unavailable

Category: Unavailable

Page count: 95

The tendency to cooperate in social dilemma situations strongly depends on how the decision is framed. In particular, cooperation levels are higher in decisions that involve doing something good to others, rather than avoid doing harm. However, this insight mostly comes from linear public goods games carried out as lab experiments. Here, we conduct a threshold public goods game -- framed as a public good or public bad -- that requires players to coordinate on a contribution threshold. The experiment is carried out as an artefactual field experiment in rural Cambodia with users who frequently cooperate and coordinate on water use, water infrastructure, and fishing, which are activities that link to the mechanisms of the game. We find that the level of cooperation and group success in reaching the threshold are higher in a positive than a negative frame. We find the role of beliefs to be salient, as players hold more optimistic beliefs about contributions of others in the negative frame. Generally, contributions exceed the best-response, but are not sufficient to close the gap between the too optimistic beliefs and actual contributions in the negative frame. Hence, contributions and group success are lower in the public bad game.