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Graduated stringency within collective incentives for group environmental compliance: Building coordination in field-lab experiments with artisanal gold miners in Colombia
Institution:1. School of Environmental and Rural Studies, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Colombia;2. Sanford School of Public Policy, Duke University, United States;3. School of Economics and Center for the Study of Security and Drugs (CESED), Universidad de Los Andes, Colombia;1. Virginia Institute of Marine Science and Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843, USA;2. Clark University, 950 Main St., Worcester, MA, 01610, USA;3. Virginia Institute of Marine Science, College of William & Mary, Gloucester Point, VA 23062, USA;4. Monash University, Australia;5. University of Melbourne, Australia;1. University of Alaska Anchorage, 3211 Providence Drive, Anchorage AK, 99501, United States;2. Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies, 120 Kroon Hall, New Haven CT, 06510, United States;3. McGill University, 805 Sherbrooke St West, Canada;1. Dept. Análisis Económico, Teoría Económica e Historia Económica, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain;2. IMUVa: Dept. Economía Aplicada (Matemáticas), Universidad de Valladolid, Spain;1. The World Bank, United States;2. Georgetown University, United States;1. The Robert Day School of Economics and Finance, Claremont McKenna College, 500 E. Ninth Street, Claremont, CA 91711, USA;2. Department of Economics, College of William and Mary, P.O. Box 8795, Williamsburg, VA 23187, USA
Abstract:Small-scale gold mining is important to rural livelihoods in the developing world but also a source of environmental externalities. Incentives for individual producers are the classic policy response for a socially efficient balance between livelihoods and the environment. Yet monitoring individual miners is ineffective, or it is very costly, especially on frontiers with scattered small-scale miners. We ask whether monitoring at a group level effectively incentivizes cleaner artisanal mining by combining lower-cost external monitoring with local collective action. We employ a mining-framed, threshold-public-goods experiment in Colombia's Pacific region, with 640 participants from frontier mining communities. To study compliance with collective environmental targets, we vary the target stringency, including to compare increases over time in the stringency versus decreases. We find that collective incentives can induce efficient equilibria, with group compliance – and even inefficient overcompliance – despite the existence of equilibria with zero contributions. Yet, for demanding targets in which the reward for compliance barely outweighs the cost, compliance can collapse. Those outcomes improve with past successes for easier targets, however, so our results suggest gain from building coordination via graduated stringency.
Keywords:Collective incentives  Environmental policy  Graduated stringency  Field-lab experiments  Small-scale gold mining  Colombia  D70  C92  Q58
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