Groups and socially responsible production: an experiment with farmers
Groups and socially responsible production: an experiment with farmers
Does corporate social responsibility decrease when decisions are made by several people instead of an individual entrepreneur? And if so, why? I study these questions in a lab-in-the-field experiment involving 126 Italian farmers. They are asked to choose between an ecological version of a product and non-ecological version that provides them with a profit to use on their farms. To study the effect of collective decision making, I introduce a novel design with two experimental variations: (i) the number of people responsible for the decision (one vs three); and (ii) the number of people receiving a payoff from the decision (one vs three). I find that a collective payoff leads to less socially responsible decisions, possibly because it provides participants with the moral wiggle room to behave less socially responsibly. Sharing the responsibility of the decision with others does not change behavior in this setting. I also find that my experimental measure of social responsibility correlates well with measures of social responsibility outside the lab.
372-392
Vecchi, Martina
4f9d9a35-032d-4003-8e8c-f91090419c88
25 February 2022
Vecchi, Martina
4f9d9a35-032d-4003-8e8c-f91090419c88
Vecchi, Martina
(2022)
Groups and socially responsible production: an experiment with farmers.
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 196, .
(doi:10.1016/j.jebo.2022.01.020).
Abstract
Does corporate social responsibility decrease when decisions are made by several people instead of an individual entrepreneur? And if so, why? I study these questions in a lab-in-the-field experiment involving 126 Italian farmers. They are asked to choose between an ecological version of a product and non-ecological version that provides them with a profit to use on their farms. To study the effect of collective decision making, I introduce a novel design with two experimental variations: (i) the number of people responsible for the decision (one vs three); and (ii) the number of people receiving a payoff from the decision (one vs three). I find that a collective payoff leads to less socially responsible decisions, possibly because it provides participants with the moral wiggle room to behave less socially responsibly. Sharing the responsibility of the decision with others does not change behavior in this setting. I also find that my experimental measure of social responsibility correlates well with measures of social responsibility outside the lab.
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Group and CSR
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Accepted/In Press date: 23 January 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 February 2022
Published date: 25 February 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 491353
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491353
ISSN: 0167-2681
PURE UUID: 4eed942a-0b7c-403d-84f3-802e4158d88d
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Date deposited: 20 Jun 2024 16:49
Last modified: 21 Jun 2024 02:08
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Author:
Martina Vecchi
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