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Norms, moods, and free lunch: Longitudinal evidence on payments from a Pay-What-You-Want restaurant

Norms, moods, and free lunch: Longitudinal evidence on payments from a Pay-What-You-Want restaurant
Norms, moods, and free lunch: Longitudinal evidence on payments from a Pay-What-You-Want restaurant
We study the distribution and evolution of payments in a Pay-What-You-Want restaurant. Despite missing price tags and despite the option to pay nothing at all, we observe that the vast majority of guests makes strictly positive payments. Over the two years covered by our data, average payments decline slightly, converging at a positive level. At the same time, the number of daily guests increases steadily, resulting in a considerable increase in total revenues. We discuss one possible interpretation of the long-term trend in payments in terms of social norms. We further show that short-term fluctuations in average payments are partly explained by exogenous weather changes. We provide evidence that – in line with work in psychology – weather-induced changes in mood affect payments.
D49, moods, pay-what-you-want, Social norms, weather, Z13
1053-5357
476-483
Riener, Gerhard
8e8e27a6-4931-4e70-b223-688f3fd616c1
Traxler, Christian
fbce2cb6-e022-4f61-bf45-78bf77e2121b
Riener, Gerhard
8e8e27a6-4931-4e70-b223-688f3fd616c1
Traxler, Christian
fbce2cb6-e022-4f61-bf45-78bf77e2121b

Riener, Gerhard and Traxler, Christian (2012) Norms, moods, and free lunch: Longitudinal evidence on payments from a Pay-What-You-Want restaurant. Journal of Socio-Economics, 41 (4), 476-483. (doi:10.1016/j.socec.2011.07.003).

Record type: Article

Abstract

We study the distribution and evolution of payments in a Pay-What-You-Want restaurant. Despite missing price tags and despite the option to pay nothing at all, we observe that the vast majority of guests makes strictly positive payments. Over the two years covered by our data, average payments decline slightly, converging at a positive level. At the same time, the number of daily guests increases steadily, resulting in a considerable increase in total revenues. We discuss one possible interpretation of the long-term trend in payments in terms of social norms. We further show that short-term fluctuations in average payments are partly explained by exogenous weather changes. We provide evidence that – in line with work in psychology – weather-induced changes in mood affect payments.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 14 July 2011
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 August 2011
Published date: 1 August 2012
Keywords: D49, moods, pay-what-you-want, Social norms, weather, Z13

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 479760
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479760
ISSN: 1053-5357
PURE UUID: cee68721-f3de-41dc-82a6-6502def79092
ORCID for Gerhard Riener: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1056-2034

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Date deposited: 26 Jul 2023 16:58
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: Gerhard Riener ORCID iD
Author: Christian Traxler

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