Norms, Gender, and Payment Method Affect Extraction Behavior in a Framed Field Experiment on Community Forestry in India

IFPRI Discussion Paper 2091

27 Pages Posted: 12 Mar 2022

See all articles by Wei Zhang

Wei Zhang

International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) - Environment and Production Technology Division

Ruth S. Meinzen-Dick

International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)

Sanoop Lissah

Foundation for Ecological Security

Raksha Balakrishna

School of Sustainability and the Center for Behavior, Institutions, and the Environment, Arizona State University

Hemalatha Reddy

Foundation for Ecological Security

Marco A. Janssen

Arizona State University (ASU)

Liya Thomas

Global Development Institute, University of Manchester

Pratiti Priyadarshini

Foundation for Ecological Security

sandeep Kandikuppa

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Rahul Chaturvedi

Foundation for Ecological Security

Rucha Ghate

Foundation for Ecological Security

Date Written: December 31, 2021

Abstract

This paper presents results from a framed field experiment in which participants make decisions about extraction of a common-pool resource, a community forest. The experiment was designed and piloted as both a research activity and an experiential learning intervention during 2017-2018 with 120 groups of resource users (split by gender) from 60 habitations in two Indian states, Andhra Pradesh and Rajasthan. We examine whether local beliefs and norms about community forest, gender of participants, within-experiment treatments (non-communication, communication, and optional election of institutional arrangements (rules)) and remuneration methods affect harvest behaviour and groups’ tendency to cooperate. Furthermore, we explore whether the experiment and subsequent community debriefing had learning effects. Results reveal a “weak” Nash Equilibrium in which participants harvested substantially less than the Nash prediction even in the absence of communication, a phenomenon stronger for male than female participants in both states. For male groups in both states, both communication and optional rule election are associated with lower group harvest per round, as compared to the reference non-communication game. For female groups in both states, however, communication itself did not significantly slow down resource depletion; but the introduction of optional rule election did reduce harvest amounts. For both men and women in Andhra Pradesh and men in Rajasthan, incentivized payments to individual participants significantly lowered group harvest, relative to community flat payment, suggesting a possible “crowding-in” effect on pro-social norms. Despite the generally positive memory of the activity, reported actual changes are limited. This may be due to the lack of follow-up with the communities between the experiment and the revisit. The fact that many of the communities already have a good understanding of the importance of the relationships between (not) cutting trees and the ecosystem services from forests, with rules and strong internal norms against cutting that go beyond the felling of trees in the game, may have also meant that the game did not have as much to add. Findings have methodological and practical implications for designing behavioral intervention programs to improve common-pool resource governance.

Keywords: INDIA, SOUTH ASIA, ASIA, gender, extraction, community forestry, collective ownership, field experimentation, forests, game, experiential learning, payment methods, common-pool resource, framed field experiments

Suggested Citation

Zhang, Wei and Meinzen-Dick, Ruth S. and Lissah, Sanoop and Balakrishna, Raksha and Reddy, Hemalatha and Janssen, Marco A. and Thomas, Liya and Priyadarshini, Pratiti and Kandikuppa, sandeep and Chaturvedi, Rahul and Ghate, Rucha, Norms, Gender, and Payment Method Affect Extraction Behavior in a Framed Field Experiment on Community Forestry in India (December 31, 2021). IFPRI Discussion Paper 2091, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4014671

Wei Zhang (Contact Author)

International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) - Environment and Production Technology Division ( email )

1201 Eye St, NW,
Washington, DC 20005
United States

Ruth S. Meinzen-Dick

International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) ( email )

1201 Eye St, NW,
Washington, DC 20005
United States

Sanoop Lissah

Foundation for Ecological Security ( email )

India

Raksha Balakrishna

School of Sustainability and the Center for Behavior, Institutions, and the Environment, Arizona State University ( email )

Farmer Building 440G PO Box 872011
Tempe, AZ 85287
United States

Hemalatha Reddy

Foundation for Ecological Security ( email )

India

Marco A. Janssen

Arizona State University (ASU) ( email )

Farmer Building 440G PO Box 872011
Tempe, AZ 85287
United States

Liya Thomas

Global Development Institute, University of Manchester ( email )

Oxford Road
Manchester, M13 9PL
United Kingdom

Pratiti Priyadarshini

Foundation for Ecological Security ( email )

India

Sandeep Kandikuppa

affiliation not provided to SSRN

Rahul Chaturvedi

Foundation for Ecological Security ( email )

India

Rucha Ghate

Foundation for Ecological Security ( email )

India

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