Working paper

Tastes for Desert and Placation: A Reference Point-Dependent Model of Social Preferences

Daniel L. Chen

Abstract

This paper proposes a reference-point dependent model of social behavior where individuals maximize a three-term utility function: a consumption utility term and two “social” terms. One social term captures a preference for desert (i.e., others getting what we think they deserve) and the other term a preference for the satisfaction of other’s expectations, or to placate them (i.e., them getting what we think they think they deserve). After motivating the modeling assumptions with findings from empirical moral philosophy and evolutionary psychology, I introduce the model and generate some simple comparative statics results, which I then test with experiments. I discuss how the model explains several paradoxes of empirical moral philosophy that are less explicable by current economic models of social preference focusing on outcomes and intentions.

Keywords

Reference points; social preferences; just desert;

JEL codes

  • D6: Welfare Economics
  • K2: Regulation and Business Law

Replaced by

Daniel L. Chen, Tastes for Desert and Placation: A Reference Point-Dependent Model of Social Preferences, Research in Experimental Economics, 2018.

Reference

Daniel L. Chen, Tastes for Desert and Placation: A Reference Point-Dependent Model of Social Preferences, TSE Working Paper, n. 16-725, October 2016.

See also

Published in

TSE Working Paper, n. 16-725, October 2016