Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5067135 European Economic Review 2012 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Numerous studies suggest that communication may be a universal means to mitigate collective action problems. In this study, we challenge this view and show that the communication structure crucially determines whether communication mitigates or intensifies rent-seeking for pure public goods. We observe the effect of different communication structures in the context of a finitely repeated intergroup contest and demonstrate that conflict expenditures are significantly higher if communication is restricted to one's own group as compared to a situation with no communication. However, expenditures are significantly lower if open communication within one's own group and between rivaling groups is allowed. We show that under open communication intergroup conflicts are avoided by groups taking turns in winning the contest. Our results do not only qualify the role of communication for collective action but may also provide insights on how to mitigate the destructive nature of intergroup conflict and group rent-seeking.

► This paper challenges the role of communication as a universal means to mitigate collective action problems. ► We show that the communication structure determines whether communication mitigates or intensifies rent-seeking for public goods. ► We show that under open communication intergroup conflicts are avoided by turn taking between groups. ► Our results may provide insights on how to mitigate the destructive nature of intergroup conflicts and group rent-seeking.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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