The Limitations of Experimental Design: A Case Study Involving Monetary Incentive Effects in Laboratory Markets
Steven Kachelmeier () and
Kristy Towry ()
Experimental Economics, 2005, vol. 8, issue 1, 33 pages
Abstract:
We replicate an influential study of monetary incentive effects by Jamal and Sunder (1991) to illustrate the difficulties of drawing causal inferences from a treatment manipulation when other features of the experimental design vary simultaneously. We first show that the Jamal and Sunder (1991) conclusions hinge on one of their laboratory market sessions, conducted only within their fixed-pay condition, that is characterized by a thin market and asymmetric supply and demand curves. When we replicate this structure multiple times under both fixed pay and pay tied to performance, our findings do not support Jamal and Sunder’s (1991) conclusion about the incremental effects of performance-based compensation, suggesting that other features varied in that study likely account for their observed difference. Our ceteris paribus replication leaves us unable to offer any generalized conclusions about the effects of monetary incentives in other market structures, but the broader point is to illustrate that experimental designs that attempt to generalize effects by varying multiple features simultaneously can jeopardize the ability to draw causal inferences about the primary treatment manipulation. Copyright Springer Science + Business Media, Inc. 2005
Keywords: experimental design; monetary incentives; market power (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2005
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DOI: 10.1007/s10683-005-0435-5
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