2022
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-14891-7
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Human competition is not lower if competing is socially wasteful instead of socially beneficial

Abstract: Humans compete for jobs, promotions, income, status, and many other scarce goods. In some situations, allocating scarce goods via competition is socially beneficial. In other situations, competition is not necessary to allocate goods, and nevertheless engaging in competition creates inefficiencies and welfare loss. We use an incentivized lab experiment to study whether people compete differently depending on whether allocating scarce goods via competition is socially wasteful or socially beneficial. We find th… Show more

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