Environmental context and termination uncertainty in games with a dynamic public bad
We employ a laboratory experiment to investigate the effects of environmental context and termination uncertainty on decisions in a dynamic game with a public bad. Every period the subjects decide on their own production level that generates private revenue and ‘emissions’. Emissions accumulate over time and act as a public bad. We characterize and use as benchmarks the Markov perfect equilibrium and social optimum and find that observed decisions are between the two predictions. We find no significant effect of termination uncertainty on decisions in any except the last few rounds where, in a fixed-end setting, subjects allocate their entire endowment to production. We find a strong effect of environmental context which partially substitutes for experience. The effect of experience is most pronounced in the fixed-end treatment where production allocations and the level of the public bad become lower after the restart.
Year of publication: |
2013
|
---|---|
Authors: | Pevnitskaya, Svetlana ; Ryvkin, Dmitry |
Published in: |
Environment and Development Economics. - Cambridge University Press. - Vol. 18.2013, 01, p. 27-49
|
Publisher: |
Cambridge University Press |
Description of contents: | Abstract [journals.cambridge.org] |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
The effect of options to reward and punish on behavior in bargaining
Pevnitskaya, Svetlana, (2021)
-
Rewards and Punishments in Bargaining
Pevnitskaya, Svetlana, (2009)
-
The effect of access to clean technology on pollution reduction : an experiment
Pevnitskaya, Svetlana, (2022)
- More ...