Logo
Munich Personal RePEc Archive

Decentralized or Centralized Governance in Social Dilemmas? Experimental Evidence from Georgia

Mekvabishvili, Rati (2023): Decentralized or Centralized Governance in Social Dilemmas? Experimental Evidence from Georgia. Published in: Issues in Social Science , Vol. 11, No. 1 (30 June 2023): pp. 33-43.

[thumbnail of Mekvabishvili R., Decentralized or Centralized Governance in Social dilemmas - Experimental Evidence from Georgia.pdf]
Preview
PDF
Mekvabishvili R., Decentralized or Centralized Governance in Social dilemmas - Experimental Evidence from Georgia.pdf

Download (235kB) | Preview

Abstract

The vast majority of experimental studies on the effectiveness of punishments in promoting cooperation in social dilemma situation examine decentralized incentive systems where all group members can punish each other. Cross-societal experimental studies suggest that while decentralized incentives can successfully promote cooperation in one society, they fail to do so in another. So, how is social order, as a large-scale cooperation problem among strangers, maintained in such societies? Many modern societies overcome this problem through well-functioning top-down formal enforcement institutions. In the experimental setting of the public goods game, we compare a strong and weak exogenous centralized incentive system with a decentralized incentive system in the case of Georgia. Our experimental evidence suggests that in Georgia, self-governed groups are doomed to suffer from high inefficiencies under a decentralized peer-to-peer punishment incentive system. They are better off when punishment power is given to an external centralized authority that is not exposed to power abuse risks.

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact us: mpra@ub.uni-muenchen.de

This repository has been built using EPrints software.

MPRA is a RePEc service hosted by Logo of the University Library LMU Munich.