Financial rewards do not stimulate coproduction: evidence from two experiments (Record no. 509535)

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Personal name Voorberg, William et al
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Title Financial rewards do not stimulate coproduction: evidence from two experiments
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Date of publication, distribution, etc 2018
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Extent p.864-873.
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Summary, etc Western governments are increasingly trying to stimulate citizens to coproduce public services by, among other strategies, offering them financial incentives. However, there are competing views on whether financial incentives stimulate coproduction. While some argue that financial incentives increase citizens' willingness to coproduce, others suggest that incentives decrease their willingness (i.e., crowding out). To test these competing expectations, the authors designed a set of experiments that offered subjects a financial incentive to assist municipalities in helping refugees integrate. The experiment was first conducted among university students within a laboratory setting. Then, the initial findings were replicated and extended among a general adult sample. Results suggest that small financial rewards have no effect: they neither increase nor decrease people's willingness to coproduce. When the offered amount is increased substantially, willingness to coproduce increases only marginally. Hence, financial incentives are not a very cost‐efficient instrument to stimulate coproduction. - Reproduced
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Topical term or geographic name as entry element Public service
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Main entry heading Public Administration Review
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Subject DIP Public administration
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Item type Articles
Holdings
Withdrawn status Lost status Source of classification or shelving scheme Damaged status Not for loan Permanent location Current location Date acquired Serial Enumeration / chronology Barcode Date last seen Koha item type
          Indian Institute of Public Administration Indian Institute of Public Administration 2019-05-13 78(6), Nov/Dec, 2018: p.864-873. AR119695 2019-05-13 Articles

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