Další formáty:
BibTeX
LaTeX
RIS
@article{1837417, author = {Staněk, Rostislav and Krčál, Ondřej and Čellárová, Katarína}, article_location = {New York}, article_number = {June}, doi = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socec.2022.101851}, keywords = {Strict liability;Assistance;Procedural preferences;Experiment;Moral hazard}, language = {eng}, issn = {2214-8043}, journal = {Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics}, title = {Pull yourself up by your bootstraps: Identifying procedural preferences against helping others in the presence of moral hazard}, url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221480432200026X}, volume = {98}, year = {2022} }
TY - JOUR ID - 1837417 AU - Staněk, Rostislav - Krčál, Ondřej - Čellárová, Katarína PY - 2022 TI - Pull yourself up by your bootstraps: Identifying procedural preferences against helping others in the presence of moral hazard JF - Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics VL - 98 IS - June SP - 1-9 EP - 1-9 PB - ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC SN - 22148043 KW - Strict liability;Assistance;Procedural preferences;Experiment;Moral hazard UR - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221480432200026X N2 - Governments and organizations often implement policies designed to help people affected by undesirable events. Such policies can make the society better off, but they may also create moral hazard. We use a laboratory experiment to examine two questions. First, can discretionary decisions to provide assistance overcome the problem of moral hazard and lead to higher efficiency? Second, if so, will people prefer this discretionary procedure to the strict liability policy in which no assistance is provided? We find that assistance is more efficient than a strict liability procedure. However, people still prefer the strict liability regime over assistance. We conduct additional treatments that show that this effect is not driven by the presence of human discretion, nor by aversion to risk, ambiguity, loss or inequality. This suggests that when moral hazard is a concern people have procedural preferences in favor of strict liability. ER -
STANĚK, Rostislav, Ondřej KRČÁL a Katarína ČELLÁROVÁ. Pull yourself up by your bootstraps: Identifying procedural preferences against helping others in the presence of moral hazard. \textit{Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics}. New York: ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, 2022, roč.~98, June, s.~1-9. ISSN~2214-8043. Dostupné z: https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socec.2022.101851.
|