Abstract
Do people discriminate between co-ethnics and others in cooperative interactions? In an experiment in China, we find that participants in trust games send around 15% more to partners they know to be co-ethnics than to those whose ethnicity they do not know. Re- ceivers’ behavior is determined by amounts received and not by perceived ethnicity. In line with previous literature we find that subjects contribute more to public goods in ethnically homogeneous groups than in mixed groups. We find evidence for a new explanation that is not due to different intrinsic preferences for cooperation with ingroup and outgroup members. Instead, subjects’ willingness to punish in-group members for free-riding is re- duced when out-group members are present. This leads to lower contributions and net earnings in mixed groups. Thus favoritism towards co-ethnics can hurt both those engag- ing in favoritism and those being favored.
JEL codes
- C93: Field Experiments
- D9: Intertemporal Choice
- H41: Public Goods
Reference
Cesar Mantilla, Ling Zhou, Charlotte Wang, Donghui Yang, Suping Shen, and Paul Seabright, “Favoring your in-group can harm both them and you: Ethnicity and public goods provision in China”, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, vol. 185, May 2021, pp. 211–233.
See also
Published in
Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, vol. 185, May 2021, pp. 211–233