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Field experiments in economics [electronic resource] / edited by Glenn W. Harrison, Jeffrey Carpenter and John A. List.

Contributor(s): Series: Research in experimental economics ; v. 10.Publication details: Bingley, U.K. : Emerald, 2005.Description: 1 online resource (vi, 372 p.)ISBN:
  • 9781849503242 (electronic bk.) :
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: No titleDDC classification:
  • 330 22
LOC classification:
  • HB74.5 .F54 2005
Online resources:
Contents:
Field experiments in economics : an introduction / Jeffrey P. Carpenter, Glenn W. Harrison, John A. List -- Field experiments and control / Glenn W. Harrison -- Field experiments in economics : some methodological caveats / Andreas Ortmann -- Three themes on field experiments and economic development / Juan Camilo Cardenas, Jeffrey P. Carpenter -- Eliciting risk and time preferences using field experiments : some methodological issues / Glenn W. Harrison, Morten Igel Lau, E. Elisabet Rutstrèom, Melonie B. Sullivan -- Saving decisions of the working poor : short- and long-term horizons / Catherine Eckel, Cathleen Johnson, Claude Montmarquette -- Comparing students to workers : the effects of social framing on behavior in distribution games / Jeffrey P. Carpenter, Stephen Burks, Eric Verhoogen -- The effects of educational vouchers on confidence : a field experiment to assess outcomes of educational policy / Robert Slonim, Eric Bettinger -- Bargaining behavior, demographics and nationality : what can the experimental evidence show? / Anabela Botelho, Glenn W. Harrison, Marc A. Hirsch, E. Elisabet Rutstrèom.
Summary: Experimental economists are leaving the reservation. They are recruiting subjects in the field rather than in the classroom, using field goods rather than induced valuations, and using field context rather than abstract terminology in instructions. This volume examines the methodology of field experiments, and offers a wide array of applications of field experiments. The methodological issues revolve around the ability of field experimenters to ensure the same degree of control that lab experimenters claim. The applications cover issues such as risk and time preferences of the Danish population, savings decisions of the Canadian working poor, differences between the social preferences of American students and workers, the effect of educational vouchers on American school children, and differences in bargaining behavior across nations. This volume serves as an introduction to the issues and applications of this new area of experimental economics.
Item type: eBooks
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Field experiments in economics : an introduction / Jeffrey P. Carpenter, Glenn W. Harrison, John A. List -- Field experiments and control / Glenn W. Harrison -- Field experiments in economics : some methodological caveats / Andreas Ortmann -- Three themes on field experiments and economic development / Juan Camilo Cardenas, Jeffrey P. Carpenter -- Eliciting risk and time preferences using field experiments : some methodological issues / Glenn W. Harrison, Morten Igel Lau, E. Elisabet Rutstrèom, Melonie B. Sullivan -- Saving decisions of the working poor : short- and long-term horizons / Catherine Eckel, Cathleen Johnson, Claude Montmarquette -- Comparing students to workers : the effects of social framing on behavior in distribution games / Jeffrey P. Carpenter, Stephen Burks, Eric Verhoogen -- The effects of educational vouchers on confidence : a field experiment to assess outcomes of educational policy / Robert Slonim, Eric Bettinger -- Bargaining behavior, demographics and nationality : what can the experimental evidence show? / Anabela Botelho, Glenn W. Harrison, Marc A. Hirsch, E. Elisabet Rutstrèom.

Experimental economists are leaving the reservation. They are recruiting subjects in the field rather than in the classroom, using field goods rather than induced valuations, and using field context rather than abstract terminology in instructions. This volume examines the methodology of field experiments, and offers a wide array of applications of field experiments. The methodological issues revolve around the ability of field experimenters to ensure the same degree of control that lab experimenters claim. The applications cover issues such as risk and time preferences of the Danish population, savings decisions of the Canadian working poor, differences between the social preferences of American students and workers, the effect of educational vouchers on American school children, and differences in bargaining behavior across nations. This volume serves as an introduction to the issues and applications of this new area of experimental economics.

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