Bidding to Give in the Field - Onderstal, Schram and Soetevent

Abstract: In a door-to-door fundraising field experiment, we study the impact of fundraising mechanisms on charitable giving. We approached about 4500 households, each participating in an all-pay auction, a lottery, a non-anonymous voluntary contribution mechanism (VCM), or an anonymous VCM. In contrast to the VCMs, households in the all-pay auction and the lottery competed for a prize. Although the all-pay auction is the superior fundraising mechanism both in theory and in the laboratory, it did not raise the highest revenue per household in the field and even raised significantly less than the anonymous VCM. Our experiment reveals that this can be attributed to substantially lower participation in the all-pay auction than in the other mechanisms while the average donation for those who contribute is only slightly (and statistically insignificantly) higher. We explore various explanations for this lower participation and favor of one that argues that competition in the all-pay mechanism crowds out intrinsic motivations to contribute.

KEYWORDS:Charitable Fundraising; Field Experiment; Auction; Lottery; Voluntary Contribution Mechanism

JEL CODES: C93, D44, D64, H41

Bidding to Give in the Field [paper]

Appendix with Additional Results

Maps of solicitor itineraries [zip-file, 10MB]

Appendix with scripts [translated from Dutch]

Pictures of materials used