Decisions on Extending Group Membership—Evidence from a Public Good Experiment
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Related Literature
3. Material and Methods (Experimental Setup)
4. Hypotheses
5. Results
5.1. Does the Prospect of Membership Extension Affect Cooperation?
5.2. What Determines the Decision to Extend Membership?
5.3. How Do Membership Extensions or Replacements Affect Subsequent Cooperation Behavior?
6. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Appendix B. Questionnaire
Strongly disagree | Strongly agree | |||||
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
- The fact that other players belonged to a different player type than mine had an influence on my game strategy.
- The members of my group got on well together.
- I thought that the interaction with the other group members was good.
- I did not like most of the other group members.
- The group members did not have to rely on each other in my group.
- All group members had to contribute in order to achieve the group’s objectives.
- In my group, goals could be reached that one group member could not have reached by her- or himself.
- In my group, the group members did not have to cooperate in order to achieve the group’s objectives
- The overall group behavior reflects who I am.
- I consider myself to be very different from the other group members.
- I consider myself to be similar to the other group members.
- I would rather have been in another group.
- I trusted the players in my group.
- I think that the other players trusted me.
- I could identify with my group.
Strongly disagree | Strongly agree | |||||
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
- The fact that other players belonged to a different player type than mine had an influence on my game strategy.
- The members of my group got on well together.
- I thought that the interaction with the other group members was good.
- I did not like most of the other group members.
- The group members did not have to rely on each other in my group.
- All group members had to contribute in order to achieve the group’s objectives.
- In my group, goals could be reached that one group member could not have reached by her- or himself.
- In my group, the group members did not have to cooperate in order to achieve the group’s objectives
- The overall group behavior reflects who I am.
- I consider myself to be very different from the other group members.
- I consider myself to be similar to the other group members.
- I would rather have been in another group.
- I trusted the players in my group.
- I think that the other players trusted me.
- I could identify with my group.
Strongly disagree | Strongly agree | |||||
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
- I wanted to earn as much money as possible in this experiment.
- I wanted to earn more money than the others in this experiment.
- I wanted to earn exactly as much money as the others in this experiment.
- In this experiment, I wanted to achieve that everyone earned the same amount if possible.
- Having a player type assigned to me had an influence on my game strategy.
- If everyone contributes to the group’s results, I am willing to contribute as well.
Strongly disagree | Strongly agree | |||||
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
- … is reserved
- … is generally trusting
- … tends to be lazy
- … is relaxed, handles stress well
- … has few artistic interests
- … is outgoing, sociable
- … tends to find fault with others
- … does a thorough job
- … gets nervous easily
- … has an active imagination
Strongly disagree | Strongly agree | |||||
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
- If someone does me a favor, I am prepared to return it.
- If I suffer a serious wrong, I will take revenge as soon as possible, no matter what the cost.
- If somebody puts me in a difficult position, I will do the same to him/her.
- I go out of my way to help somebody who has been kind to me before.
- If somebody offends me, I will offend him/her back.
- I am ready to undergo personal costs to help somebody who helped me before.
Strongly disagree | Strongly agree | |||||
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
- I often compare the well-being of my loved ones (boyfriend or girlfriend, family members, etc.) with that of others.
- I always pay close attention to how I do things compared to how others do them.
- If I want to find out how well I have done something, I compare the result with that of other people.
- I often compare my social skills and my popularity with other people’s. I am not the type of person who compares themselves with others (reversed).
- I often compare myself with others with regard to what I have accomplished (so far) in life.
- I often like talking with other people about our opinions and experiences.
- I often try to find out what others think who are facing similar problems to mine.
- I always like to know what others would do in a similar situation.
- If I want to find out more about something, I try to find out what others think or know about it.
- I never rate my situation in life by comparing it with that of other people (reversed).
- Please state your gender
- ○
- Male
- ○
- Female
- Please state your year of birth
- ○
- ___________
- Which university school or department are you currently studying with or employed by?
- ○
- Engineering
- ○
- MINT
- ○
- Business Administration/Business Administration and Engineering
- ○
- Medicine
- ○
- Other
- ○
- Employed
- What is your next aspired academic degree?
- ○
- Bachelor
- ○
- Master
- ○
- German “Diplom”
- ○
- German State Examination
- ○
- Doctoral
- ○
- Other
- ○
- Not applicable
Appendix C
Belief of | Belief in | Treatment Variation | Average Contribution | |
---|---|---|---|---|
P (n = 57) | Other P | Endo_Rep | 8.781 | p = 0.193 |
P (n = 33) | Other P | Endo_Ext | 10.106 | |
P (n = 57) | T | Endo_Rep | 8.780 | p = 0.044 |
P (n = 33) | T | Endo_Ext | 10.970 |
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1 | Public good games are a prominent example for social dilemmas and illustrate inefficient allocations of individual contributions compared to socially desired outcomes [11,12]. Pubic goods may represent various goods, e.g., public health, air pollution, or other outcomes of groups [12]. We implement the public good game in an experimental setting to focus on cooperation levels within a group of individuals. |
2 | There are interesting experimental studies analyzing the impact of different decision mechanisms on cooperation behavior, such as direct democracy [19,20], election delegation [21,22], or leadership [23,24]. In our experiment, we do not set the in-group decision-maker as leader of the group. Moreover, the results of Ibanez and Schaffland [25] reveal that leaders who are members of the group do not affect contributions in a public good game. |
3 | |
4 | Kamei [36] analyzes effects of an endogenous versus an exogenous setup in a public good game where subjects democratically vote to play (1) under partner matching or (2) under random matching. Most individuals prefer to play under partner matching protocol and higher cooperation levels are achieved. |
5 | Note that participants in the subgame perfect equilibrium derived via backward induction in this finitely repeated game also contribute 0 to the public good in each stage game. This prediction is independent of the different types of players and the endogeneity of the replacement/extension decision. |
6 | Subjects who are assigned to the role of group member T are not informed about the likelihood of replacement. In general, the probability of extending group membership or replacing the temporary agent is 50%. Due to non-attendance of some subjects, we were unable to split Exo into two equal groups of extension or replacement. |
7 | Elicitation of beliefs may reveal underlining preferences and constraints of group members towards other group members’ contributions [38], in particular we are interested to gain more insights in differences between player types and effects of beliefs on the following contributions. |
8 | Subjects were randomly assigned to groups of four and received a payoff as described above. |
9 | Following Gächter and Renner [38], we ask the subjects for the individual contributions of all other group members (in tokens) and compute the mean contribution of the other three group members. Further, the payoffs from the beliefs are based on a subject’s guess about average contributions, i.e., whether she does not misestimate the mean contribution by 10 tokens. However, losses are not possible. |
10 | All subsequent results are robust by including a female dummy. |
11 | Results of a weakest-link experiment by McCarter and Sheremeta [43] show a decrease in group performance after the arrival of two newcomers in a group of four, and the authors justify the behavior by a decrease of trust within the group, as newcomers are unaffected by performance history. However, with an endogenous decision mechanism, replacement of the temporary group member may signal information on (failed) performance to the newcomer. |
12 | In settings with four permanent group members, Grund et al.’s [16] findings reveal an average contribution of 5.95 over 10 rounds. Our results indicate a higher level of cooperation in both treatments. |
13 | All reported nonparametric tests are conducted with the Mann–Whitney U test and are two-tailed. Only in the case of a directed hypothesis are applied nonparametric tests one-tailed. |
14 | Existing public good literature usually clusters at group-level, but assumes homogenous group members; in contrast, our groups consist of heterogeneous player types and, therefore, we cluster at individual level to disentangle contribution behavior of different player types. However, results of Table 3 are robust to clustering at group-level. |
Treatment (Variation) | No. of Groups | No. of Individuals | No. of Players | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
P | T | N | |||
Exo | |||||
All | 38 | 170 | 114 | 38 | 18 |
Exo_Rep | 18 | 90 | 54 | 18 | 18 |
Exo_Ext | 20 | 80 | 60 | 20 | - |
Endo | |||||
All | 30 | 150 | 90 | 30 | 30 |
Endo_Rep | 19 | 95 | 57 | 19 | 19 |
Endo_Ext | 11 | 55 | 33 | 11 | 11 |
Total | Player P | Player T | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Exo (n = 152) | 6.98 | 7.24 | 6.20 | p = 0.287 |
Endo (n = 120) | 7.14 | 6.89 | 7.88 | p = 0.308 |
p = 0.491 | p = 0.865 | p = 0.064 |
Individual Contribution in Part I | |
---|---|
Endo treatment (1 = yes) | 3.009 * |
(1.701) | |
Player of type P (1 = yes) | 1.451 |
(1.359) | |
Endo treatment Player of type P | −3.512 * |
(1.982) | |
Conditional willingness to cooperate | 5.549 *** |
(1.018) | |
Round | −0.888 *** |
(0.0783) | |
Constant | 5.603 *** |
(1.472) | |
Pseudo R2 | 0.023 |
Observations | 2720 |
Replacement Decision (Endo_Rep, n = 19) | Extension Decision (Endo_Ext, n = 11) | [*] | |
---|---|---|---|
Mean group contribution part I | 6.34 | 8.52 | p = 0.051 |
MaxDrop | 6.47 | 4.52 | p = 0.160 |
Replacement Decision (Endo_Rep) | Extension Decision (Endo_Ext) | [*] | |
---|---|---|---|
Player P | 6.04 (n = 57) | 8.36 (n = 33) | p = 0.022 |
Player T | 7.23 (n = 19) | 9.02 (n = 11) | p = 0.189 |
I | II | |
---|---|---|
Mean group contribution in part I | −0.149 * | |
(0.081) | ||
[−0.050] | ||
MaxDrop | 0.153 * | |
(0.083) | ||
[0.052] | ||
Conditional willingness to cooperate | −0.361 | −0.279 |
(0.568) | (0.544) | |
[−0.122] | [−0.095] | |
Constant | 1.654 | −0.314 |
(0.827) | (0.614) | |
Observations | 30 | 30 |
Rep | Ext | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Player P | Player N | Player P | Player T | Total Rep | Total Ext | ||
Exo (n = 152) | 6.46 | 7.16 | 4.97 | 4.77 | 6.63 | 4.91 | p = 0.071 |
Endo (n = 120) | 5.22 | 6.67 | 6.25 | 6.52 | 5.58 | 6.31 | p = 0.562 |
I | II | III | IV | V | VI | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Replacement (1 = yes) | 2.558 * | 2.579 * | 3.503 | 2.026 | −3.456 | −2.570 |
(1.444) | (1.433) | (3.456) | (1.439) | (3.103) | (4.323) | |
Player type P (1 = yes) | −0.322 | 0.250 | −0.320 | −0.306 | 0.241 | |
(1.840) | (2.167) | (1.794) | (1.766) | (1.941) | ||
Player type PReplacement | −1.224 | −1.159 | ||||
(3.748) | (3.592) | |||||
MaxDrop | −0.395 * | −0.709 ** | −0.708 ** | |||
(0.210) | (0.287) | (0.287) | ||||
MaxDropReplacement | 0.848 * | 0.847 * | ||||
(0.471) | (0.471) | |||||
Conditional willingness to | 3.274 * | 3.318 * | 3.175 * | 2.727 | 2.769 | |
Cooperate | (1.725) | (1.707) | (1.738) | (1.725) | (1.702) | |
Round | −1.297 *** | −1.299 *** | 1.298 *** | −1.307 *** | −1.311 *** | −1.310 *** |
(0.144) | (0.145) | (0.145) | (0.145) | (0.145) | (0.145) | |
Constant | 21.85 *** | 19.899 | 19.434 *** | 23.007 *** | 25.687 *** | 25.235 *** |
(2.160) | (3.190) | (3.248) | (3.360) | (3.618) | (3.632) | |
Observations | 1520 | 1520 | 1520 | 1520 | 1520 | 1520 |
I | II | III | IV | V | VI | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Replacement (1 = yes) | −1.089 | −0.431 | 0.785 | 0.376 | −4.888 * | −3.672 |
(1.353) | (1.316) | (2.119) | (1.400) | (2.677) | (3.069) | |
Player type P (1 = yes) | −2.334 * | −1.335 | −2.346 * | −2.333 * | −1.364 | |
(1.369) | (2.016) | (1.371) | (1.339) | (1.906) | ||
Player type PReplacement | −1.616 | −1.563 | ||||
(2.710) | (2.623) | |||||
MaxDrop | −0.363 * | −1.156 *** | −1.152 *** | |||
(0.208) | (0.417) | (0.415) | ||||
MaxDropReplacement | 1.058 ** | 1.050 ** | ||||
(0.476) | (0.473) | |||||
Conditional willingness to | 2.871 * | 2.994 * | 3.138 ** | 2.844 * | 2.965 * | |
Cooperate | (1.535) | (1.554) | (1.536) | (1.506) | (1.529) | |
Round | −1.270 *** | −1.269 *** | −1.269 *** | −1.270 *** | −1.264 *** | −1.264 *** |
(0.132) | (0.132) | (0.132) | (0.132) | (0.132) | (0.132) | |
Constant | 24.00 *** | 23.407 *** | 22.572 *** | 24.838 *** | 28.486 *** | 27.965 *** |
(2.209) | (2.764) | (2.777) | (2.745) | (3.234) | (1.529) | |
Observations | 1200 | 1200 | 1200 | 1200 | 1200 | 1200 |
Decision-Maker (Player of Type P) | Non-Decision-Maker (Player of Type P) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
I | II | III | IV | V | VI | |
Replacement (1 = yes) | 3.915 | −7.172 | −6.597 | −1.354 | −3.425 | −3.831 |
(2.909) | (5.796) | (5.643) | (1.854) | (3.647) | (3.814) | |
Conditional willingness to | 0.816 | −0.0152 | −5.147 | 6.019 *** | 5.856 *** | 13.73 *** |
Cooperate | (2.836) | (2.542) | (5.929) | (2.195) | (2.154) | (4.189) |
MaxDrop | −1.554 *** | −3.282 *** | −3.966 *** | 0.0522 | −0.255 | 0.638 |
(0.530) | (1.068) | (1.131) | (0.266) | (0.627) | (0.726) | |
ReplacementMaxDrop | 2.378 ** | 2.247 * | 0.407 | 0.575 | ||
(1.194) | (1.168) | (0.680) | (0.716) | |||
Conditional willingness to | 0.957 | −1.344 ** | ||||
CooperateMaxDrop | (1.086) | (0.669) | ||||
Round | −1.203 *** | −1.168 *** | −1.160 *** | −1.321 *** | −1.320 *** | −1.323 *** |
(0.266) | (0.259) | (0.257) | (0.210) | (0.210) | (0.210) | |
Constant | 27.23 *** | 34.45 *** | 38.20 *** | 19.88 *** | 21.38 *** | 15.86 *** |
(4.280) | (6.350) | (6.531) | (3.747) | (4.387) | (4.978) | |
Observations | 300 | 300 | 300 | 600 | 600 | 600 |
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Grund, C.; Harbring, C.; Thommes, K.; Tilkes, K.R. Decisions on Extending Group Membership—Evidence from a Public Good Experiment. Games 2020, 11, 61. https://doi.org/10.3390/g11040061
Grund C, Harbring C, Thommes K, Tilkes KR. Decisions on Extending Group Membership—Evidence from a Public Good Experiment. Games. 2020; 11(4):61. https://doi.org/10.3390/g11040061
Chicago/Turabian StyleGrund, Christian, Christine Harbring, Kirsten Thommes, and Katja Rebecca Tilkes. 2020. "Decisions on Extending Group Membership—Evidence from a Public Good Experiment" Games 11, no. 4: 61. https://doi.org/10.3390/g11040061