Cooperative choice and its framing effect under threshold uncertainty in a provision point mechanism

  • Kotani Koji
    Associate Professor, Graduate School of International Relations, International University of Japan
  • Tanaka Kenta
    Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Tohoku University
  • Managi Shunsuke
    Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Tohoku University

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Abstract

This paper explores how threshold uncertainty affects cooperative behaviors in each of public goods provision and public bads prevention. The following facts motivate our study. First, resource and environmental problems can be either framed as public bads prevention or public goods provision. Second, the occurrence of these problems is characterized by the existence of thresholds which is interchangeably represented by "nonconvexity," "bifurcation," "bi-stability," or "catastrophes." Third, the location of such a threshold is mostly unknown to observers. We employ a provision point mechanism with threshold uncertainty, and analyze the response of cooperative behaviors to uncertainty and to the framing in each type of social preferences categorized by a value orientation test. We find that aggregate framing effects are negligible, though response to the frame is opposite to the type of social preference in each subject. "Cooperative" subjects become more cooperative in negative frames than in positive frames, while "individualistic" subjects are less cooperative in negative frames than in positive ones. This implies that insignificance of the aggregate framing effect arises from the behavioral asymmetry. We also find the percentage of cooperative choices non-monotonically varies with the degree of threshold uncertainty, irrespective of framing and value orientation. More specifically, the degree of cooperation is highest in the intermediate level of threshold uncertainty, whereas it sharply drops as the uncertainty becomes sufficiently large.

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Details 詳細情報について

  • CRID
    1571135652007207296
  • NII Article ID
    110008008988
  • NII Book ID
    AA12509645
  • Text Lang
    en
  • Data Source
    • CiNii Articles

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