Framing effects on bribery behaviour: experimental evidence from China and Uganda

In this study we investigate the effect of framing on bribery behaviour. To do this, we replicate Barr and Serra (Exp Econ, 12(4):488–503, ( 2009 ) and carry out a simple one-shot bribery game that mimics corruption. In one treatment, we presented the experiment in a framed version, in which wording...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the Economic Science Association 2018, Vol.4 (1), p.86-97
Hauptverfasser: Gaggero, Alessio, Appleton, Simon, Song, Lina
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In this study we investigate the effect of framing on bribery behaviour. To do this, we replicate Barr and Serra (Exp Econ, 12(4):488–503, ( 2009 ) and carry out a simple one-shot bribery game that mimics corruption. In one treatment, we presented the experiment in a framed version, in which wording was embedded with social context; in the other, we removed the social context and presented the game in a neutral manner. The contribution of this paper is that it offers a comparison of framing effects in two highly corrupt countries: China and Uganda. Our results provide evidence of strong and significant framing effects for Uganda, but not for China.
ISSN:2199-6776
2199-6784
2199-6784
DOI:10.1007/s40881-018-0049-2