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Why Do People Volunteer? An Experimental Analysis of Preferences for Time Donations
by
Meer, Jonathan
, Brown, Alexander L.
, Williams, J. Forrest
in
Altruism
/ altruism and philanthropy
/ behavior and behavioral decision making
/ Charities
/ Charity
/ Donations
/ Earnings
/ Experiments
/ Gift giving
/ Gifts
/ microeconomic behavior
/ Money
/ Preferences
/ Social interest
/ Time
/ Value
/ Volunteers
/ Wage differential
/ Wage rates
/ Wages & salaries
2019
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Why Do People Volunteer? An Experimental Analysis of Preferences for Time Donations
by
Meer, Jonathan
, Brown, Alexander L.
, Williams, J. Forrest
in
Altruism
/ altruism and philanthropy
/ behavior and behavioral decision making
/ Charities
/ Charity
/ Donations
/ Earnings
/ Experiments
/ Gift giving
/ Gifts
/ microeconomic behavior
/ Money
/ Preferences
/ Social interest
/ Time
/ Value
/ Volunteers
/ Wage differential
/ Wage rates
/ Wages & salaries
2019
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Why Do People Volunteer? An Experimental Analysis of Preferences for Time Donations
by
Meer, Jonathan
, Brown, Alexander L.
, Williams, J. Forrest
in
Altruism
/ altruism and philanthropy
/ behavior and behavioral decision making
/ Charities
/ Charity
/ Donations
/ Earnings
/ Experiments
/ Gift giving
/ Gifts
/ microeconomic behavior
/ Money
/ Preferences
/ Social interest
/ Time
/ Value
/ Volunteers
/ Wage differential
/ Wage rates
/ Wages & salaries
2019
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Why Do People Volunteer? An Experimental Analysis of Preferences for Time Donations
Journal Article
Why Do People Volunteer? An Experimental Analysis of Preferences for Time Donations
2019
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Overview
Why do individuals volunteer their time even when recipients receive far less value than the donor’s opportunity cost? Previous models of altruism that focus on the overall impact of a gift cannot rationalize this behavior, despite its prevalence. We develop a model that allows for differential warm glow depending on the form of the donation. In a series of laboratory experiments that control for other aspects of volunteering, such as its signaling value, subjects demonstrate behavior consistent with the theoretical assumption that gifts of time produce greater utility than the same transfers in the form of money. Subjects perform an effort task, accruing earnings at potentially different wage rates for themselves or a charity of their choice, with the ability to transfer any of their personal earnings to charity at the end of the experiment. Subjects exhibit strong preferences for donating time even when differential wage rates make it costly to do so. The results provide new insights on the nature of volunteering and gift giving.
Data, the online appendix, and the experimental instructions are available at
https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2017.2951
.
This paper was accepted by Teck-Hua Ho, behavioral economics.
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