The dark side of friendship: envy
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10481/31506Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Universidad de Granada. Departamento de Teoría e Historia Económica
Materia
Coordination Efficiency Envy Experiments Friendship Social networks
Fecha
2007Referencia bibliográfica
Cobo-Reyes, R.; Jiménez, N. The dark: side of friendship: envy. Universidad de Granada. Departamento de Teoría e Historia Económica (2007). (The Papers; 07/07). [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/31506]
Patrocinador
Financial support is gratefully acknowledge by the Generalitat Valenciana GV 06/275 , Spanish Ministry SEJ2007-62081/ECON and Junta de Andalucía SEJ-2547.Resumen
This paper studies the effect of social relations on the convergence to the effcient equilibrium in a 2x2 coordination game. We employ a 2x2 factorial design in which we explore two different games with asymmetric payoffs and two matching protocols: "friends" versus "strangers". In the first game payoffs of the worse off player are the same in the two equilibria, whereas in the second game, this player must sacrifice her own payoff for achieving the efficient equilibrium. Results show that "strangers" coordinate more frequently in the efficient equilibrium than "friends" in both games. Regarding network measures, (such us degree in, degree out and betweenness) they are all positively correlated with the strategy which leads to the efficient outcome except clustering. In addition, envy is a salient factor in explaining efficient convergence.