规范执行:愤怒、义愤还是互惠?

NORM ENFORCEMENT: ANGER, INDIGNATION, OR RECIPROCITY?

Journal of the European Economic Association · 2012
被引 116
人大 AABS 4

中文导读

通过实验研究第三方惩罚的动机,发现愤怒驱动的惩罚主要来自直接受影响的第二方,而第三方惩罚则源于义愤和群体互惠,且第三方更注重效率而非从众。

Abstract

The enforcement of social norms often requires that unaffected third parties sanction offenders. Given the renewed interest of economists in norms, the literature on third-party punishment is surprisingly thin. In this paper, we report the results of an experiment designed to replicate the anger-based punishment of directly affected second parties and evaluate two distinct explanations for third-party punishment: indignation and group reciprocity. We find evidence in favor of both, with the caveat that the incidence of indignation-driven sanctions is perhaps smaller than earlier studies have hinted. Furthermore, our results suggest that second parties use sanctions to promote conformism while third parties intervene primarily to promote efficiency.

第三方惩罚愤怒义愤群体互惠