posted on 2005-07-26, 00:00authored byEmily C Haisley, Roberto A Weber
We show that people manipulate their valuations of ambiguous risks when doing so
allows them to justify unfair behavior. In a binary dictator decision, dictators chose between a
“fair” and an “unfair” choice. By choosing the unfair choice, dictators increase their own
allocation, decrease the allocation to the recipient, and make the recipient’s allocation dependent
on a p=0.5 lottery. More unfair allocations were made when the lottery was ambiguous than
when it involved simple risk.
We posit a mechanism through which dictators reconcile self-interest with a desire to act
fairly in the presence of ambiguity. We predict and find that dictators adopt a favorably-biased
view of ambiguity, as evidenced by higher estimates of the expected value of ambiguous lotteries
relative to comparable lotteries involving simple risk. Dictators adopt this biased perception of
ambiguity despite monetary incentives for accuracy. However, this motivated favorable view of
ambiguity and increased unfair behavior is extinguished when dictators are constrained by their
own initial unmotivated (negative) attitudes towards ambiguity. These findings suggest that
perceptions of ambiguity can be manipulated by an underlying desire to behave self-interestedly
at the expense of another, and run counter to the usual finding that ambiguity is perceived as
unfavorable (ambiguity aversion).