How group deliberation shapes distributional preferences: an experimental analysis
How group deliberation shapes distributional preferences: an experimental analysis
This paper investigates how group deliberation changes individual distributional preferences. We experimentally assess the relative contribution of persuasion, social identity, and social comparison to shifts in preferences following deliberation. In a controlled setting, participants engaged in ten minutes of non-binding written group deliberation about distributional choices. Post-deliberation preferences became significantly more egalitarian than pre-deliberation ones. This within-subject preference shift is supported by a between-subject comparison showing that group deliberation has a larger egalitarian effect than individual deliberation. What explains this egalitarian shift? Our findings suggest that social identity formation is the primary but not unique driver of the change in preferences. Social identity appears to largely explain the pronounced egalitarian shift among participants who lose from equality, while persuasion and social comparison seem to account for the preference changes among those whose material payoffs are unaffected by the distributive outcome. These findings have important implications for the elicitation of distributional preferences and for the design of communicative institutions that precede collective decision-making.
Distributional preferences, Group deliberation, Persuasion, Social comparison, Social identity
Ferreira, João V.
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Schokkaert, Erik
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Tarroux, Benoît
3f76c7cb-5292-456f-b29c-cfbe3a43e77c
3 March 2026
Ferreira, João V.
0aad606a-eab0-473c-a230-9b3dfa2d7d93
Schokkaert, Erik
63623adc-0d08-4ff0-8c19-643288b32f1d
Tarroux, Benoît
3f76c7cb-5292-456f-b29c-cfbe3a43e77c
Ferreira, João V., Schokkaert, Erik and Tarroux, Benoît
(2026)
How group deliberation shapes distributional preferences: an experimental analysis.
Journal of Economic Psychology, 114 (102893), [102893].
(doi:10.1016/j.joep.2026.102893).
Abstract
This paper investigates how group deliberation changes individual distributional preferences. We experimentally assess the relative contribution of persuasion, social identity, and social comparison to shifts in preferences following deliberation. In a controlled setting, participants engaged in ten minutes of non-binding written group deliberation about distributional choices. Post-deliberation preferences became significantly more egalitarian than pre-deliberation ones. This within-subject preference shift is supported by a between-subject comparison showing that group deliberation has a larger egalitarian effect than individual deliberation. What explains this egalitarian shift? Our findings suggest that social identity formation is the primary but not unique driver of the change in preferences. Social identity appears to largely explain the pronounced egalitarian shift among participants who lose from equality, while persuasion and social comparison seem to account for the preference changes among those whose material payoffs are unaffected by the distributive outcome. These findings have important implications for the elicitation of distributional preferences and for the design of communicative institutions that precede collective decision-making.
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Ferreira et al. - How group deliberation shapes distributional preferences
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Accepted/In Press date: 17 February 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 February 2026
Published date: 3 March 2026
Keywords:
Distributional preferences, Group deliberation, Persuasion, Social comparison, Social identity
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 511274
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511274
ISSN: 0167-4870
PURE UUID: bf28a2a8-88d1-42df-bdda-b5093a937925
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Date deposited: 11 May 2026 16:41
Last modified: 13 May 2026 01:59
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Author:
Erik Schokkaert
Author:
Benoît Tarroux
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