Affiliation:
1. Yale School of Management, Yale University (email: )
2. Birmingham Business School, University of Birmingham (email: )
Abstract
Using a large-scale hybrid laboratory and online trust experiment with and without preplay communication, we investigate how the passage of time affects trust. Communication (predominantly through promises) raises cooperation, trust, and trustworthiness by about 50 percent. This result holds even when three weeks pass between the time of the trustee’s message/the trustor’s decision to trust and the time of the trustee’s contribution choice and even when this contribution choice is made outside of the lab. Delay between the beginning of the interaction and the time to reciprocate neither substantially alters trust or trustworthiness nor affects how subjects communicate. (JEL C91, D83, D91, Z13)
Publisher
American Economic Association
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Cited by
7 articles.
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