Democratic Competition for Rank, Cooperation, and Deception in Small Groups

No Thumbnail Available
Can’t use the file because of accessibility barriers? Contact us with the title of the item, permanent link, and specifics of your accommodation need.

Date

2020-12

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Abstract

ABSTRACT: Stratified groups face at least two obstacles in solving collective action problems and producing public goods. Individuals face temptation to free-ride, and high-ranking group members face incentives to protect their position at the group’s expense. We introduce democratic competition for rank as a solution to the problem of cooperation in groups. We argue that democratic competition for high rank creates incentives for cooperation that are absent in non-democratic groups. In a small-group behavioral experiment, we contrast groups in which individuals compete for a valuable high-ranking position through democratic elections with groups in which individuals compete for high rank in resource-based competitions. Groups faced a fluctuating external threat, and group members could invest resources in manipulating the apparent (but not actual) level of this threat. We find that democratic groups reward high contributors by electing them to the high-ranking position at greater rates than low contributors. We also find evidence that individuals in democratic groups contribute more to the public good than individuals in non-democratic groups. However, high-ranking individuals in democratic groups exaggerate threats to the group at similar rates to high-ranking individuals in non-democratic groups. The findings suggest that democratic competition increases public goods production and overall group efficiency, but does not eliminate – and may exacerbate – individuals’ tendency to deceive their peers.

Description

This includes data, STATA do-files, research materials (zTree and .exe files to conduct the experiment, protocol, and debriefing form) and readme text file for Benard and Barclay's "Democratic Competition for Rank, Cooperation, and Deception in Small Groups", forthcoming in Social Science Quarterly.

Keywords

social dilemma, public good, threat-dependent cooperation, leadership

Citation

Journal

DOI

Link(s) to data and video for this item

Relation

Rights

Type

Dataset
Other

Collections