Putting in Effort for the Benefit of All: The Role of Reward and Effort Requirements, 2019-2020

Ludwiczak, Agata and Adams, Zoe Katherine and Osman, Magda (2022). Putting in Effort for the Benefit of All: The Role of Reward and Effort Requirements, 2019-2020. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Service. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-855913

The need for new ideas in macroeconomics is evident. Most macroeconomists not only failed to recognise the weaknesses in the global economy before the financial crisis, their main macroeconomic model specifically excluded the possibility of financial vulnerability. Assumptions about human behaviour and how markets operate have undermined the effectiveness of macroeconomics as a guide for practical policy making.
The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) is the UK's foremost macroeconomics research institute outside of the university sector. As our mission is to understand the economic forces that shape peoples' lives and to influence policy. We are free of political and commercial interests and the constraints that can inhibit university departments.
Our network, Rebuilding Macroeconomics, would start the transformation of macroeconomics back into a useful policy science. We have created a team of 25 world-class social scientists from economics, psychology, anthropology, sociology, neuroscience, economic history, political science, biology and physics all renowned for challenging mainstream ideas to spear-head this effort.
Rebuilding Macroeconomics will challenge the central assumptions and methods of modern macroeconomics and identify the building blocks for a new and genuinely relevant macroeconomics. Our network will create ran opportunity for scholars, policy makers and practitioners to coalesce around a substantive macroeconomic policy question and to explore, learn from and challenge each other's assumptions and ways of thinking and to consider possible new methods of investigation.
The Rebuilding Macroeconomics leadership team of will provide guidance by finding broad research agendas through a process of both guidance and discovery, through dialogue across the UK, that (a) directly address important macroeconomic policy issues, (b) facilitate research that would not be done otherwise, (c) bring new methodologies to bear in macroeconomics, and (d) that can attract enough scholars to launch and sustain an effective future research agenda.
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The RM network will offer value for money. Most Co-Investigators have signalled their willingness to work on a pro bono basis to maximise the amount of research money available for the best ideas. The allocation of funds will be made public through a transparent process.
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Data description (abstract)

The data folder for the “Putting in effort for the benefit of all: the role of reward and effort requirements” project contains experimental data and project materials.

Experimental data
The Experimental data consists of one “Data_with_description_RM” file in .xlsx format. This file holds data from the effort task, where participants were required to declare a number of times they wanted to squeeze a handgrip device for group benefit or individual gain before actually completing the task. The file contains:
• information about participants’ unique identifier (column A), group allocation (column B), gender (column C), age (column D), the condition they were in (column E), and the pot to which they contributed effort to begin with (column F), information about the number of trials participants intended to contribute to the individual (column H) and public pot (column I) and how many trials they actually contributed to the different pots (individual – column J, group – column K), as well as information about the round of the experiment (column G).

Experimental data also includes transcripts from the online chatroom. This includes 36 files in .docx format. The files contain transcripts from the online chats from Round 1 and Round 2 for each group separately. Each chat participant is marked by their unique identifier.

Project materials include two files in .docx format: the detailed information sheet given to participants, and the combined brief information sheet and consent form document.

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Ludwiczak Agata University of Greenwich https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5532-5492
Adams Zoe Katherine Queen Mary University of London
Osman Magda University of Cambridge
Sponsors: Economic and Social Research Council
Grant reference: ES/R00787X/1
Topic classification: Economics
Psychology
Keywords: PSYCHOLOGY, REWARDS, PRIZES (REWARDS), COOPERATION, DECISION MAKING, GROUP BEHAVIOUR, GROUP COMMUNICATION
Project title: Rebuilding Macroeconomics
Grant holders: Angus Armstrong (Principal Investigator), Michael John Grubb (Co-Investigator), Roger Edward Farmer (Co-Investigator), Stephen Kinsella (Co-Investigator), Gary Arthur Dymski (Co-Investigator), Jean-Philippe Bouchaud (Co-Investigator), Ekaterina Svetlova (Co-Investigator), Doyne Farmer (Co-Investigator), Tiago Cavalcanti (Co-Investigator), Paul Collier (Co-Investigator), Dennis J. Snower (Co-Investigator), David Alastair Tuckett (Co-Investigator), Laura Charlotte Bear (Co-Investigator)
Project dates:
FromTo
1 October 201930 September 2020
Date published: 23 Sep 2022 15:49
Last modified: 23 Sep 2022 15:56

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