Cooperation under the Shadow of the Future: Experimental Evidence from Infinitely Repeated Games
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Abstract
While there is an extensive literature on the theory of infinitely repeated games, empirical evidence on how “the shadow of the future” affects behavior is scarce and inconclusive. I simulate infinitely repeated prisoner's dilemma games in the lab with a random continuation rule. The experimental design represents an improvement over the existing literature by including sessions with finite repeated games as controls and a large number of players per session (which allows for learning without contagion effects). I find that the shadow of the future matters not only by significantly reducing opportunistic behavior, but also because its impact closely follows theoretical predictions.
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649
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- 22.68
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Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Shadow (psychology)
- Prisoner's dilemma
- Dilemma
- Economics
- Repeated game
- Session (web analytics)
- Mathematical economics
- Continuation
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