Politicians, institutional incentives, and citizen welfare: evidence from a lab-in-the-field experiment in India

被引:0
|
作者
Banerjee, Prasenjit [1 ,2 ]
Iversen, Vegard [3 ]
Mitra, Sandip [4 ]
Sen, Kunal [5 ]
机构
[1] Univ Manchester, Sch Social Sci, Econ, Manchester, England
[2] XLRI Xavier Sch Management, Econ, Jamshedpur, India
[3] Univ Greenwich, Nat Resources Inst, Chatham, England
[4] Indian Stat Inst, Kolkata, India
[5] UNU WIDER, Helsinki, Finland
关键词
asymmetric information; politician behaviour; social preferences; promises; dictator game; India; D63; C91; C93; H11; ELECTION PLEDGES; SOCIAL DISTANCE; PROMISES; PREFERENCES; FULFILLMENT; COMPETITION; DICTATOR; BEHAVIOR; IMAGE; MODEL;
D O I
10.1093/oep/gpae028
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
We examine how politicians and non-politicians in rural India respond to behavioural incentives. Using a modified dictator game, we vary treatments (and incentives) across the nature of interactions, the visibility of actions, and an upfront promise. Under anonymity, politicians and non-politicians behave selfishly: both become significantly more generous when interactions are personalized. However, while non-politicians respond to greater visibility more strongly than politicians, an upfront promise induces more pronounced politician responses. Whereas promise-breaking appears to be more costly for politicians, visibility, via social image concerns, appears to matter more for non-politicians. This mix of similarity and heterogeneity in response suggests that evidence about the behaviour of real-world politicians is more important for effective policy design than acknowledged so far.
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页数:20
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