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Increasing the impact of collective incentives in payments for ecosystem services
Institution:1. Sanford School of Public Policy and Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, USA;2. Sanford School of Public Policy, Duke University, USA;3. School of Management, Universidad de Los Andes, Colombia;4. Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, USA
Abstract:Collective payments for ecosystem services (PES) programs make payments to groups, conditional on specified aggregate land-management outcomes. Such collective contracting may be well suited to settings with communal land tenure or decision-making. Given that collective contracting does not require costly individual-level information on outcomes, it may also facilitate conditioning on additionality (i.e., conditioning payments upon clearly improved outcomes relative to baseline). Yet collective contracting often suffers from free-riding, which undermines group outcomes and may be exacerbated or ameliorated by PES designs. We study impacts of conditioning on additionality within a number of collective PES designs. We use a framed field-laboratory experiment with participants from a new PES program in Mexico. Because social interactions are critical within collective processes, we assess the impacts from conditioning on additionality given: (1) group participation in contract design, and (2) a group coordination mechanism. Conditioning on above-baseline outcomes raised contributions, particularly among initially lower contributors. Group participation in contract design increased impact, as did the coordination mechanism.
Keywords:Payments for ecosystem services  Collective action  Conditionality  Additionality  Mexico
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