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The Value of Honesty: Empirical Estimates from the Case of the Missing Children
[report]
2011
unpublished
How much are people willing to forego to be honest, to follow the rules? When people do break the rules, what can standard data sources tell us about their behavior? Standard economic models of crime typically assume that individuals are indifferent to dishonesty, so that they will cheat or lie as long as the expected pecuniary benefits exceed the expected costs of being caught and punished. We investigate this presumption by studying the response to a change in tax reporting rules that made it
doi:10.3386/w17247
fatcat:l6ln7aes7re23ano6nxeknlopy