4.5 Article

Social preferences and public economics: Mechanism design when social preferences depend on incentives

Journal

JOURNAL OF PUBLIC ECONOMICS
Volume 92, Issue 8-9, Pages 1811-1820

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpubeco.2008.03.006

Keywords

social preferences; implementation theory; incentive contracts; incomplete contracts; framing; motivational crowding out; ethical norms; constitutions

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Social preferences such as altruism, reciprocity, intrinsic motivation and a desire to uphold ethical norms are essential to good government, often facilitating socially desirable allocations that would be unattainable by incentives that appeal solely to self-interest. But experimental and other evidence indicates that conventional economic incentives and social preferences may be either complements or substitutes, explicit incentives crowding in or crowding out social preferences. We investigate the design of optimal incentives to contribute to a public good under these effects would make either more or less use of explicit incentives, by comparison to a naive planner who assumes they are absent. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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