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Partners or Strangers? Cooperation, Monetary Trade, and the Choice of Scale of Interaction
Author(s) -
Maria Bigoni,
Gabriele Camera,
Marco Casari
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
american economic journal microeconomics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.339
H-Index - 40
eISSN - 1945-7685
pISSN - 1945-7669
DOI - 10.1257/mic.20170280
Subject(s) - economics , scale (ratio) , institution , monetary economics , microeconomics , norm (philosophy) , political science , physics , quantum mechanics , law
We show that monetary exchange facilitates the transition from small to large-scale economic interactions. In an experiment, subjects chose to play an "intertemporal cooperation game" either in partnerships or in groups of strangers where payoffs could be higher. Theoretically, a norm of mutual support is sufficient to maximize efficiency through large-scale cooperation. Empirically, absent a monetary system, participants were reluctant to interact on a large scale; and when they did, efficiency plummeted compared to partnerships because cooperation collapsed. This failure was reversed only when a stable monetary system endogenously emerged: the institution of money mitigated strategic uncertainty problems.

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