Working Paper

Preferences for Truth-Telling

Johannes Abeler, Daniele Nosenzo, Collin Raymond
CESifo, Munich, 2016

CESifo Working Paper No. 6087

Private information is at the heart of many economic activities. For decades, economists have assumed that individuals are willing to misreport private information if this maximizes their material payoff. We combine data from 90 experimental studies in economics, psychology and sociology, and show that, in fact, people lie surprisingly little. We then formalize a wide range of potential explanations for the observed behavior, identify testable predictions that can distinguish between the models and conduct new experiments to do so. Our empirical evidence suggests that a preference for being seen as honest and a preference for being honest are the main motivations for truth-telling.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Behavioural Economics
Keywords: private information, honesty, truth-telling, lying, meta study
JEL Classification: D030, D820, H260, I130, J310