Anonymity, reciprocity,and conformity: evidence from voluntary contributions to a national park in Costa Rica
Por: Alpízar, F
| Carlsson, F
| Johansson Stenman, O
| Environment for Development, Gothenburg (Suecia)
| Resources for the Future, Washington, DC (EUA)
.
Series Discussion paper series (EfD).Editor: Gothenburg, Suecia Elsevier 2008Descripción: 24 páginas : 1 ilustración, 3 tablas.Tema(s): PARQUES NACIONALES| Tipo de ítem | Ubicación actual | Colección | Signatura | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Documento digital
|
Biblioteca Conmemorativa Orton | Colección CATIE | 3383187 (Navegar estantería) | Disponible | BCO22068332 |
Incluye 40 referencias bibliográficas en las páginas 1056-1060
We investigate the role of anonymity, reciprocity, and conformity for voluntary contributions, based on a natural fieldexperiment conducted at a national park in Costa Rica. Contributions made in public in front of the solicitor are 25% higher thancontributions made in private. Giving subjects a small gift before requesting a contribution increases the likelihood of a positivecontribution. At the same time, the conditional contribution decreases. The total effect of giving a gift is positive but small, andtaking the cost of the gift into account, it is far from profitable. When the subjects are told that the typical contribution of others is$2 (a small contribution), the probability of a contribution increases and the conditional contribution decreases, compared withproviding no reference information. Providing a high reference level ($10) increases the conditional contributions. Overall, the totaleffects have the expected signs, although the magnitudes are smaller than what one might have expected based on existing evidencefrom laboratory experiments.


Documento digital
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