| Literature DB >> 26859492 |
Angela C M de Oliveira1, John M Spraggon1, Matthew J Denny2.
Abstract
Understanding the causal impact of beliefs on contributions in Threshold Public Goods (TPGs) is particularly important since the social optimum can be supported as a Nash Equilibrium and best-response contributions are a function of beliefs. Unfortunately, investigations of the impact of beliefs on behavior are plagued with endogeneity concerns. We create a set of instruments by cleanly and exogenously manipulating beliefs without deception. Tests indicate that the instruments are valid and relevant. Perhaps surprisingly, we fail to find evidence that beliefs are endogenous in either the one-shot or repeated-decision settings. TPG allocations are determined by a base contribution and beliefs in a one shot-setting. In the repeated-decision environment, once we instrument for first-round allocations, we find that second-round allocations are driven equally by beliefs and history. Moreover, we find that failing to instrument prior decisions overstates their importance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26859492 PMCID: PMC4747466 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0147043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Sample Information Manipulation.
Fig 2Means of Observed Information Sets.
Note: The spikes at 2 and 8 are from the experimenter-chosen information sets.
Fig 3Standard Deviations of Observed Information Sets.
Note: The spikes at 0.89 and 1.84 are from the experimenter-chosen information sets.
Validity: Do Proposed Instruments Independently Impact Contributions?
| Belief | 0.713 |
| Information Mean | -0.026 (0.044) |
| Information Standard Deviation | 0.028 (0.116) |
| Constant | 1.977 |
| N | 564 |
| Adjusted | 0.2361 |
***p ≤ 0.001
Notes: OLS regressions, with the allocation to the TPG as the dependent variable. The regression includes the proposed instruments after accounting for the other relevant variables in the regression. Marginal effects are shown, with standard errors in parentheses.
Fig 4Beliefs of Individual Allocations to the Group Account, by Treatment.
Relevance: Are Potential Instruments Correlated with Beliefs?
| Information Mean | 0.281 |
| Information Standard Deviation | 0.256 |
| Constant | 3.531 |
| N | 564 |
| Adjusted | 0.1677 |
**p ≤ 0.01,
***p ≤ 0.001
Notes: The first-stage regression is modeled as OLS with the elicited belief as the dependent variable. Marginal effects are shown, with standard errors in parentheses.
Average Allocations and Elicited Beliefs, by Treatment.
| NI | I | |
| Allocation | 5.99 (2.51) | 5.86 (2.13) |
| Belief | 5.63 (1.42) | 5.57 (1.48) |
| N | 445 | 564 |
| H-NI | H-I | |
| Allocation | 6.11 (2.15) | 5.97 (2.20) |
| Belief | 5.62 (1.51) | 5.73 (1.62) |
| N | 438 | 438 |
Standard errors in parenthesis.
Fig 5Individual Allocations to the Group Account, by Treatment.
Relationship between Allocations and Beliefs in a One-Shot TPG: with and without Instruments.
| No IV | IV | |
|---|---|---|
| Belief | 0.702 | 0.648 |
| Constant | 1.948 | 2.247 |
| N | 564 | 564 |
| Adjusted | 0.2383 | 0.2382 |
| Anderson LM ( | 96.232 (0.00) | |
| Cragg-Donald Wald | 57.706 | |
| Sargan Stat ( | 0.161 (0.69) | |
| Wu-Hausman | 0.213 (0.64) | |
| Durbin-Wu-Hausman | 0.214 (0.64) | |
**p ≤ 0.01,
***p ≤ 0.001
Notes: The No IV specifications are modeled as OLS. The IV specifications are modeled using 2SLS. The instruments used are the mean and standard deviation of the information set. Marginal effects are shown, with standard errors in parentheses.
Relationship between Allocations, Beliefs and History: with and without Instruments.
| No IV | IV | |
|---|---|---|
| Belief | 0.442 | 0.453 |
| 1st Allocation (H-NI) | 0.624 | 0.498 |
| Constant | -0.372 (0.266) | 0.335 (0.414) |
| N | 438 | 438 |
| Adjusted | 0.6117 | 0.5989 |
| Anderson LM ( | 77.856 (0.00) | |
| Cragg-Donald Wald | 31.274 | |
| Sargan Stat ( | 0.051 (0.82) | |
| Wu-Hausman | 0.781 (0.38) | |
| Durbin-Wu-Hausman | 0.786 (0.38) | |
| Wu-Hausman | 4.744 (0.03) | |
| Durbin-Wu-Hausman | 4.736 (0.03) | |
***p ≤ 0.001
Notes: The No IV specifications are modeled as OLS. The IV specifications are modeled using 2SLS. The dependent variable is the amount allocated to the group account in the second decision of the H treatment (H-I). Instruments used are the mean and standard deviation of the information set as well as the elicited belief from the first allocation decision. Marginal effects are shown, with standard errors in parentheses.