Authors
Nicolas Jacquemet, Stéphane Luchini, Julie Rosaz, Jason F Shogren
Publication date
2018/1/16
Journal
Management Science
Volume
65
Issue
1
Pages
426-438
Publisher
INFORMS
Description
Oath taking for senior executives has been promoted as a means to enhance honesty within and toward organizations. Herein we explore whether people who voluntarily sign a solemn truth-telling oath are more committed to sincere behavior when offered the chance to lie. We design an experiment to test how the oath affects truth telling in two contexts: a neutral context replicating the typical experiment in the literature, and a “loaded” context in which we remind subjects that “a lie is a lie.” We consider four payoff configurations, with differential monetary incentives to lie, implemented as within-subjects treatment variables. The results are reinforced by robustness investigations in which each subject made only one lying decision. Our results show that the oath reduces lying, especially in the loaded environment—falsehoods are reduced by 50%. The oath, however, has a weaker effect on lying in the neutral …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
N Jacquemet, S Luchini, J Rosaz, JF Shogren - Management Science, 2019