Evolutionary Norm Enforcement

Applying an indirect evolutionary approach with endogenous preference formation, we show that a legal system can induce players to reward trust even if material incentives dictate to exploit trust. By analyzing the crowding out or crowding in of trustworthiness implied by various verdict rules, we c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of institutional and theoretical economics 2000-06, Vol.156 (2), p.335-347
Hauptverfasser: Güth, Werner, Ockenfels, Axel
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Applying an indirect evolutionary approach with endogenous preference formation, we show that a legal system can induce players to reward trust even if material incentives dictate to exploit trust. By analyzing the crowding out or crowding in of trustworthiness implied by various verdict rules, we can assess how a court influences the share of kept promises of "truly" trustworthy players who evolutionarily evolved as trustworthy and of opportunistic players who are only trustworthy if inspired by material incentives.
ISSN:0932-4569