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Testing for the Emergence of Spontaneous Order

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Testing for the Emergence of Spontaneous Order. / Georgalos, Konstantinos; Hey, John.
In: Experimental Economics, Vol. 23, 01.09.2020, p. 912–932.

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Georgalos, K & Hey, J 2020, 'Testing for the Emergence of Spontaneous Order', Experimental Economics, vol. 23, pp. 912–932. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10683-019-09637-8

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Georgalos K, Hey J. Testing for the Emergence of Spontaneous Order. Experimental Economics. 2020 Sept 1;23:912–932. Epub 2019 Dec 10. doi: 10.1007/s10683-019-09637-8

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Georgalos, Konstantinos ; Hey, John. / Testing for the Emergence of Spontaneous Order. In: Experimental Economics. 2020 ; Vol. 23. pp. 912–932.

Bibtex

@article{7854d1c70eeb46dda30bc3259964677b,
title = "Testing for the Emergence of Spontaneous Order",
abstract = "We report on an experimental investigation of the emergence of Spontaneous Order, the idea that societies can co-ordinate, without government intervention, on a form of society that is good for its citizens, as described by Adam Smith. Our experimental design is based on a production game with a convex input provision possibility frontier, where subjects have to choose a point on this frontier. We start with a simple society consisting of just two people, two inputs, one final good and in which the production process exhibits returns to specialisation. We then study more complex societies by increasing the size of the society (groups of 6 and 9 subjects) and the number of inputs (6 and 9 inputs respectively), as well as the combinations of inputs that each subject can provide. This form of production can be characterised as a cooperative game, where the Nash equilibrium predicts that the optimal outcome is achieved when each member of this society specialises in the provision of a single input. Based on this framework, we investigate whether Spontaneous Order can emerge, without it being imposed by the government. We find strong evidence in favour of the emergence of Spontaneous Order, with communication being an important factor. Using text classification algorithms (Multinomial Naive Bayes) we quantitatively analyse the available chat data and we provide insight into the kind of communication that fosters specialisation in the absence of external involvement. We note that, while communication has been shown to foster coordination in other contexts (for example, in public goods games, market entry games and competitive coordination games) this contribution is in the context of a production game where specialisation is crucial.",
author = "Konstantinos Georgalos and John Hey",
year = "2020",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/s10683-019-09637-8",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
pages = "912–932",
journal = "Experimental Economics",
issn = "1386-4157",
publisher = "Springer New York",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Testing for the Emergence of Spontaneous Order

AU - Georgalos, Konstantinos

AU - Hey, John

PY - 2020/9/1

Y1 - 2020/9/1

N2 - We report on an experimental investigation of the emergence of Spontaneous Order, the idea that societies can co-ordinate, without government intervention, on a form of society that is good for its citizens, as described by Adam Smith. Our experimental design is based on a production game with a convex input provision possibility frontier, where subjects have to choose a point on this frontier. We start with a simple society consisting of just two people, two inputs, one final good and in which the production process exhibits returns to specialisation. We then study more complex societies by increasing the size of the society (groups of 6 and 9 subjects) and the number of inputs (6 and 9 inputs respectively), as well as the combinations of inputs that each subject can provide. This form of production can be characterised as a cooperative game, where the Nash equilibrium predicts that the optimal outcome is achieved when each member of this society specialises in the provision of a single input. Based on this framework, we investigate whether Spontaneous Order can emerge, without it being imposed by the government. We find strong evidence in favour of the emergence of Spontaneous Order, with communication being an important factor. Using text classification algorithms (Multinomial Naive Bayes) we quantitatively analyse the available chat data and we provide insight into the kind of communication that fosters specialisation in the absence of external involvement. We note that, while communication has been shown to foster coordination in other contexts (for example, in public goods games, market entry games and competitive coordination games) this contribution is in the context of a production game where specialisation is crucial.

AB - We report on an experimental investigation of the emergence of Spontaneous Order, the idea that societies can co-ordinate, without government intervention, on a form of society that is good for its citizens, as described by Adam Smith. Our experimental design is based on a production game with a convex input provision possibility frontier, where subjects have to choose a point on this frontier. We start with a simple society consisting of just two people, two inputs, one final good and in which the production process exhibits returns to specialisation. We then study more complex societies by increasing the size of the society (groups of 6 and 9 subjects) and the number of inputs (6 and 9 inputs respectively), as well as the combinations of inputs that each subject can provide. This form of production can be characterised as a cooperative game, where the Nash equilibrium predicts that the optimal outcome is achieved when each member of this society specialises in the provision of a single input. Based on this framework, we investigate whether Spontaneous Order can emerge, without it being imposed by the government. We find strong evidence in favour of the emergence of Spontaneous Order, with communication being an important factor. Using text classification algorithms (Multinomial Naive Bayes) we quantitatively analyse the available chat data and we provide insight into the kind of communication that fosters specialisation in the absence of external involvement. We note that, while communication has been shown to foster coordination in other contexts (for example, in public goods games, market entry games and competitive coordination games) this contribution is in the context of a production game where specialisation is crucial.

U2 - 10.1007/s10683-019-09637-8

DO - 10.1007/s10683-019-09637-8

M3 - Journal article

VL - 23

SP - 912

EP - 932

JO - Experimental Economics

JF - Experimental Economics

SN - 1386-4157

ER -