Abstract

Group cooperation is fundamental to human society. The public goods game is often used to describe the difficulty of group cooperation. However, there are other structures of institutions to maintain group cooperation such as Rotating savings and credit associations (ROSCAs). ROSCAs are informal financial institutions that exist worldwide, in which all participants contribute to a common fund and take turns to receive a return. ROSCAs are common in developing countries and among migrant groups in developed countries. There are various types of ROSCAs, and they share a crucial problem in that participants whose turn to receive a return has passed have an incentive to default on their contributions. We conducted a laboratory experiment to investigate the mechanisms that can prevent default in a fixed ROSCA, in which the order of receipt of returns is determined before starting and is also known to members. The findings are as follows. (i) Excluding low contributors from ROSCA groups by voting increased contribution rates both before and after the receipt of returns. (ii) ROSCA members exhibited reciprocity and a sense of revenge: that is, members contributed to the returns payments of other members who had contributed to them, and did not contribute to the returns payments of non-contributors. Voluntary behaviors thus sustained ROSCAs. Meanwhile, an exogenous punishment whereby subjects were prevented from receiving returns payments unless they had themselves contributed previously did not increase contribution rates.

Highlights

  • The evolution of cooperation is one of unsolved research topics from the viewpoint of evolutionary theory and social sciences such as economics, social psychology, and sociology

  • We focus on social connectedness among Rotating savings and credit associations (ROSCAs) participants, which is key to preventing defaults [35, 36]

  • We conducted a laboratory experiment to examine whether these two factors prevented subjects from becoming defaulters and sustained fixed ROSCAs, where participants are shuffled randomly for each cycle, and the order of payment is determined before each cycle starts

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Summary

Introduction

The evolution of cooperation is one of unsolved research topics from the viewpoint of evolutionary theory and social sciences such as economics, social psychology, and sociology. Koike et al [20] showed that the combination of peer selection and the forfeiture rule can prevent defaulters and maintain ROSCAs. In the present study, we conducted a laboratory experiment to examine whether these two factors prevented subjects from becoming defaulters and sustained fixed ROSCAs, where participants are shuffled randomly for each cycle, and the order of payment is determined before each cycle starts. Several studies have found that exclusion based on reputation can promote contribution level by expelling low contributors from the game [40,41,42,43] This exclusion can be interpreted as a costless punishment. The payoff function of a player in the public goods games is determined by the contributions of all players, including themselves

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