@article{publications26252, volume = {vol. 69}, number = {n? 1}, month = {October}, author = {Ingela Alger and Laura Juarez and Miriam Juarez-Torres and Josepa Miquel-Florensa}, title = {Do informal transfers induce lower efforts? Evidence from lab-in-the-field experiments in rural Mexico}, publisher = {University of Chicago Press}, year = {2020}, journal = {Economic Development and Cultural Change}, pages = {107--171}, keywords = {informal insurance, effort, moral hazard, free-riding effect, empathy effect}, url = {https://publications.ut-capitole.fr/id/eprint/26252/}, abstract = {How does informal risk sharing affect incentives to avoid risk? While moral hazard is expected under formal insurance, theory suggests that the incentive effects of informal risk sharing are ambiguous: internalization of the external effects of transfers on others may reduce or enhance incentives to avoid risk. To study this issue, which is particularly relevant for developing economies, we designed a novel real-effort lab experiment and conducted it in 16 small villages in rural Mexico. We find that subjects internalize the effects of transfers enough for the presence of transfers to significantly increase effort compared to autarky situations.} }