We experimentally test competing theories of three-player majoritarian bargaining models with fixed, known disagreement values. Subjects are randomly assigned to three roles: a proposer and two types of voters. Each role is randomly assigned a disagreement value, i.e. a given amount of money he/she will receive if the proposal is rejected. These values are known to all players before any decision is made. Proposers then make a take-it-or-leave-it offer on how to split a fixed, known amount of money among the players. If a majority of players accepts the proposal, the players’ payoffs are determined by the proposal; if the proposal is rejected, each player receives his or her reservation value. We assess the ability of three behavioral hypotheses – self-interest, egalitarianism, and inequality-aversion – to account for our results. Our primary design variable is the proposer’s reservation value, which allows us to obtain different implications from each hypothesis. We find that each hypothesis is inconsistent with our data in important respects. However, subjects strongly respond to changes in reservation values as if they were interpreted as a basic form of entitlement.
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15 December 2006
Research Article|
December 15 2006
Self-Interest, Inequality, and Entitlement in Majoritarian Decision-Making* Available to Purchase
Daniel Diermeier;
Daniel Diermeier
Department of Managerial Economics and Decision Sciences, Kellogg School of Management, and Northwestern Institute on Complex Systems (NICO), Northwestern University
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Sean Gailmard
Sean Gailmard
Department of Political Science, Northwestern University
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*This article conforms to the data replication policy of the QJPS. See www.qjps.com for a statement of the policy and a link to our data and documentation. Financial support from the Dispute Research and Resolution Center, the Searle Foundation, and the Dean of the Kellogg School of Management of Northwestern University is gratefully acknowledged. For helpful comments we are grateful to seminar participants at Princeton, Georgetown Law Center, NYU, Northwestern, and Stanford GSB, and to panelists at the 2003 APSA and MPSA annual meetings.
Received:
March 24 2005
Accepted:
March 07 2006
Online ISSN: 1554-0634
Print ISSN: 1554-0626
© 2006 D. Diermeier and S. Gailmard
2006
D. Diermeier and S. Gailmard
Licensed re-use rights only
Quarterly Journal of Political Science (2006) 1 (4): 327–350.
Article history
Received:
March 24 2005
Accepted:
March 07 2006
Citation
Diermeier D, Gailmard S (2006), "Self-Interest, Inequality, and Entitlement in Majoritarian Decision-Making*". Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Vol. 1 No. 4 pp. 327–350, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00000015
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