Truth-Telling: A Representative Assessment

21 Pages Posted: 20 Oct 2012

See all articles by Johannes Abeler

Johannes Abeler

IZA Institute of Labor Economics; University of Nottingham

Anke Becker

FernUniversität in Hagen

Armin Falk

University of Bonn - Economic Science Area; briq - Institute on Behavior & Inequality

Abstract

A central assumption of the canonical cheap talk literature is that people misreport their private information if this is to their material benefit. Recent evidence from laboratory experiments with student subjects suggests, however, that while many people do report the payoff-maximizing outcome, some report their private information truthfully or at least do not lie maximally. We measure truth-telling outside the laboratory by calling a representative sample of the German population at home. In our setup, participants have a strong monetary incentive to misreport, misreporting cannot be detected, and reputational concerns are negligible. Yet, we find that aggregate reporting behavior closely follows the expected truthful distribution. Our results underline the importance of lying costs and raise questions regarding the influence of the decision-making environment and the elicitation mode on reporting behavior.

Keywords: private information, cheap talk, honesty, lying costs, representative experiment

JEL Classification: C93, D01, D82, D83

Suggested Citation

Abeler, Johannes and Becker, Anke and Falk, Armin, Truth-Telling: A Representative Assessment. IZA Discussion Paper No. 6919, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2164648 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2164648

Johannes Abeler (Contact Author)

IZA Institute of Labor Economics ( email )

P.O. Box 7240
Bonn, D-53072
Germany

University of Nottingham

University Park
Nottingham, NG8 1BB
United Kingdom

Anke Becker

FernUniversität in Hagen ( email )

Universitätsstrasse 41
Feithstrathe 140
Hagen, 58084
Germany

Armin Falk

University of Bonn - Economic Science Area ( email )

briq - Institute on Behavior & Inequality

Schaumburg-Lippe-Straße 5-9
Bonn, 53113
Germany

HOME PAGE: http://www.briq-institute.org/

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