The central question that we ask in this paper is: do people cheat or behave dishonestly when they are unsupervised? This question is motivated by our work on environmental management programs in developing countries where local conservation effort can be either too expensive or difficult to monitor by outsiders. We combine responses from a household survey with results from a set of field experiments in rural Vietnam to examine how people behave when they are unsupervised, and how well are they able to predict the behavior of others in their community. Both the survey and the field experiments are structured along the lines of an environmental project in which local people receive an incentive for providing their time and labor to undertake project activities. Our total sample size is 400 with experimental treatments varying by group size, whether people receive cash or in-kind incentives, and whether they are monitored. In contrast to existing studies that predict compulsory cheating, we find very little cheating behavior among our subjects. Moreover, people can accurately predict the behavior of others except in a scenario when people collect cash incentives for others. In that case, people become extra cautious than what they were predicted to be. We explain these results by invocating the theory of self-concept maintenance and conclude with a discussion on potential applications of these results.
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6 December 2017
Research Article|
December 06 2017
To Cheat or Not? Results from Behavioral Experiments on Self-monitoring in Vietnam Available to Purchase
Rohit Jindal;
Rohit Jindal
Department of Decision Sciences, School of Business,
MacEwan University
, Edmonton, Canada
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Joe Arvai;
Joe Arvai
University of Michigan
, Ann Arbor, MI, USA
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Delia Catacutan;
Delia Catacutan
Decision Research
, Eugene, OR, USA
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Dam Viet Bac
Dam Viet Bac
World Agroforestry Centre
, Hanoi, Vietnam
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Online ISSN: 1944-0138
Print ISSN: 1944-012X
© 2017 R. Jindal, J. Arvai, D. Catacutan and D. V. Bac
2017
R. Jindal, J. Arvai, D. Catacutan and D. V. Bac
Licensed re-use rights only
Strategic Behavior and the Environment (2017) 7 (1-2): 179–219.
Citation
Jindal R, Arvai J, Catacutan D, Bac DV (2017), "To Cheat or Not? Results from Behavioral Experiments on Self-monitoring in Vietnam". Strategic Behavior and the Environment, Vol. 7 No. 1-2 pp. 179–219, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/102.00000080
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