Social framing effects in leadership by example: Preferences or beliefs?
Date
2024-08-10
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Type
Article
Peer reviewed
Yes
Abstract
We study the impact of framing on leading-by-example. Our 2 × 2 design consists of group level frames (Wall Street vs. Community) and individual level frames (First/Second Movers vs. Leader/Followers). We report on two studies where we elicit participants' beliefs allowing us to evaluate whether framing effects are driven by beliefs or preferences. Across both studies, average contributions are significantly lower in the Community—First Mover frame. This is primarily because leaders contribute less, pulling down followers' contributions. We find that contributions are strongly related to first order and second order beliefs but framing effects remain once we control for beliefs.
Description
open access article
Keywords
Citation
Cartwright, E. and Drouvelis, M. (2024) Social framing effects in leadership by example: preferences or beliefs? Economic Inquiry,