Abstract
A large literature studies subjective beliefs about economic facts using unincentivized survey questions. We devise randomized experiments in a representative online survey to investigate whether incentivizing belief accuracy affects stated beliefs about average earnings by professional degree and average public school spending. Incentive provision does not impact earnings beliefs, but improves school-spending beliefs. Response spikes suggest that the latter effect likely reflects increased online-search activity. Consistently, an experiment that just encourages search-engine usage produces very similar results. Another experiment provides no evidence of experimenter-demand effects. Overall, results suggest a trade-off between increased respondent effort and the risk of inducing online-search activity when incentivizing beliefs in online surveys. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
| Item Type: | Journal article |
|---|---|
| Faculties: | Economics > Chairs > CESifo-Professorship for International Trade |
| Subjects: | 300 Social sciences > 330 Economics |
| ISSN: | 0304-4076 |
| Language: | English |
| Item ID: | 110784 |
| Date Deposited: | 02. Apr 2024 07:20 |
| Last Modified: | 02. Apr 2024 07:20 |
