Laboratory on International Law and Regulation, School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, Department of Political Science, University of California, Merced, CA 95343.
Laboratory on International Law and Regulation, School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, Department of Political Science, and.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Dec 30;111(52):18536-41. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1409885111. Epub 2014 Dec 15.
One of the best-known and most replicated laboratory results in behavioral economics is that bargainers frequently reject low offers, even when it harms their material self-interest. This finding could have important implications for international negotiations on many problems facing humanity today, because models of international bargaining assume exactly the opposite: that policy makers are rational and self-interested. However, it is unknown whether elites who engage in diplomatic bargaining will similarly reject low offers because past research has been based almost exclusively on convenience samples of undergraduates, members of the general public, or small-scale societies rather than highly experienced elites who design and bargain over policy. Using a unique sample of 102 policy and business elites who have an average of 21 y of practical experience conducting international diplomacy or policy strategy, we show that, compared with undergraduates and the general public, elites are actually more likely to reject low offers when playing a standard "ultimatum game" that assesses how players bargain over a fixed resource. Elites with more experience tend to make even higher demands, suggesting that this tendency only increases as policy makers advance to leadership positions. This result contradicts assumptions of rational self-interested behavior that are standard in models of international bargaining, and it suggests that the adoption of global agreements on international trade, climate change, and other important problems will not depend solely on the interests of individual countries, but also on whether these accords are seen as equitable to all member states.
行为经济学中最著名且被复制最多的实验室结果之一是,谈判者经常拒绝低报价,即使这损害了他们的物质自身利益。这一发现对当今人类面临的许多国际问题的谈判可能具有重要意义,因为国际谈判的模型假设恰恰相反:政策制定者是理性和自利的。然而,尚不清楚参与外交谈判的精英是否会类似地拒绝低报价,因为过去的研究几乎完全基于本科生、普通公众或小规模社会的便利样本,而不是具有设计和协商政策经验的高度精英。我们使用了一个由 102 名政策和商业精英组成的独特样本,他们平均有 21 年的国际外交或政策战略实践经验,结果表明,与本科生和普通公众相比,精英在玩标准的“最后通牒游戏”时更有可能拒绝低报价,该游戏评估玩家如何就固定资源进行讨价还价。经验更丰富的精英往往提出更高的要求,这表明这种趋势只会随着政策制定者晋升为领导层而增加。这一结果与国际谈判模型中标准的理性自利行为假设相矛盾,这表明国际贸易、气候变化和其他重要问题的全球协议的通过不仅取决于个别国家的利益,还取决于这些协议是否被视为对所有成员国都是公平的。