posted on 2008-10-01, 00:00authored byCristina Bicchieri, Erte Xiao
Social norms play an important role in individual decision making. Bicchieri (2006)
argues that two different expectations influence our choice to obey a norm: what we
expect others to do (empirical expectations) and what we believe others think we ought to
do (normative expectations). Little is known about the relative importance of these two
types of expectation in individuals’ decisions, an issue that is particularly important when
normative and empirical expectations are in conflict (e.g., systemic corruption, high
crime cities). In this paper, we report data from Dictator game experiments where we
exogenously manipulate dictators’ expectations in the direction of either selfishness or
fairness. When normative and empirical expectations are in conflict, we find that
empirical expectations about other dictators’ choices significantly predict a dictator’s
own choice. However, dictators’ expectations regarding what other dictators think ought
to be done do not have a significant impact on their decisions after controlling for
empirical expectations. Our findings about the crucial influence of empirical expectations
are important for designing institutions or policies aimed at discouraging undesirable
behavior.
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Publisher Statement
The definitive version is available at http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/121401699/abstract