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Testing guilt aversion

Tore Ellingsen, Magnus Johannesson, Sigve Tjøtta () and Gaute Torsvik

Games and Economic Behavior, 2010, vol. 68, issue 1, 95-107

Abstract: Guilt averse individuals experience a utility loss if they believe they let someone down. For example, generosity depends on what the donor believes that the recipient expects to receive. We measure guilt aversion in three separate experiments: a dictator game experiment, a complete information trust game experiment, and a hidden action trust game experiment. In the experiments we inform donors about the beliefs of the matched recipients, while eliciting these beliefs so as to maximize recipient honesty. The correlation between generous behavior and elicited beliefs is close to zero in all three experiments, suggesting that guilt aversion is smaller than previously thought.

Keywords: Guilt; aversion; Beliefs; Generosity; Experiments (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2010
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (203)

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Related works:
Working Paper: Testing Guilt Aversion (2007) Downloads
Working Paper: Testing Guilt Aversion (2007) Downloads
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