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Rules, Perception and the Intelligibility of Laboratory Experiments on Social Interaction in Economics

Erik O. Kimbrough (Chapman University, CA, USA)

Contemporary Methods and Austrian Economics

ISBN: 978-1-80262-288-1, eISBN: 978-1-80262-287-4

Publication date: 27 January 2022

Abstract

Laboratory studies of social interaction have revealed a wide range of phenomena that are difficult to explain using standard economic models. For example, people will often sacrifice their own earnings in order to be generous, cooperative, punitive, and retributive in interactions with anonymous strangers. “Behavioral” models that redefine agents’ preferences attempt to provide an account of these phenomena as reflecting a “taste for fairness” or altruism, aversion to inequality, concern about others’ beliefs, and so on. Such models either fail to account for the rich sensitivity of actions to context or in allowing for rich context-dependence, these models ultimately substitute description for explanation. Hayek’s work provides a foundation for thinking about how to explain these phenomena, by conceiving of people as both purpose-seeking (as in economic models) and rule-following. Decisions are shaped both by material interests and by a normative framework that is evoked by context and helps people decide what one ought to do in a particular situation. The implication of this approach is that rather than trying to understand heterogeneity across individuals in terms of preferences, experimenters should instead try to understand heterogeneity across contexts in terms of the rules and norms that operate in the background and guide or constrain people’s purpose-seeking tendencies. What economics needs, then, is a theory of how and why these rules and norms vary with context as they do.

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Acknowledgements

Acknowledgments

Thanks to Dan D’Amico and Adam Martin for organizing the colloquium for which this chapter was produced, and thanks to Erwin Dekker, Shaun Hargreaves-Heap, Taylor Jaworski, Jonathan Schulz, John Thrasher, Bas van der Vossen, Alexander Vostroknutov, Bart Wilson, seminar participants at the NYU Colloquium on Market Institutions and Economic Processes, and all the participants in the 2020 (Virtual) Summer Scholars Program at Chapman University for many stimulating conversations on these topics. All remaining errors are my own.

Citation

Kimbrough, E.O. (2022), "Rules, Perception and the Intelligibility of Laboratory Experiments on Social Interaction in Economics", D'Amico, D.J. and Martin, A.G. (Ed.) Contemporary Methods and Austrian Economics (Advances in Austrian Economics, Vol. 26), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 35-53. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1529-213420220000026003

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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