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Avoiding the cost of your conscience: Belief dependent preferences and information acquisition
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Avoiding the cost of your conscience: Belief dependent preferences and information acquisition

Claire Rimbaud and Alice Soldà
Experimental Economics, Vol.27(3), pp.491-547
01/07/2024

Abstract

Belief-dependent preferences illusory preferences information acquisition self-serving biases experiment
Pro-social individuals typically face a trade-off between their monetary incentives and their other-regarding preferences. When this is the case, they may be tempted to exploit the uncertainty in their decision environment to reconcile this trade-off. In this paper, we investigate whether individuals with belief-dependent preferences acquire information about others’ expectations in a self-serving way. We present a model of endogenous information acquisition and test our theoretical predictions in an online experiment based on a modified trust-game in which the trustee is uncertain about the trustor’s expectations. Our experimental design enables us to (1) identify participants with belief-based preferences and (2) investigate their information acquisition strategy. Consistent with our predictions for subjective belief-dependent preferences, we find that most individuals classified as belief-dependent strategically select their source of information to avoid the cost of their conscience.
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6 Social Sciences
6.122 Economic Theory
6.122.437 Cooperation Dynamics
Web of Science research areas
Economics
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