which patient do i treat? economists and physicians in the lab

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Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab Marlies Ahlert University Halle- Wittenberg Stefan Felder Universities of Duisburg- Essen and Basel Bodo Vogt University of Magdeburg

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Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab. Marlies Ahlert University Halle-Wittenberg Stefan Felder Universities of Duisburg-Essen and Basel Bodo VogtUniversity of Magdeburg. Research questions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

Which Patient do I treat?Economists and Physicians in the Lab

Marlies Ahlert University Halle-WittenbergStefan Felder Universities of Duisburg-Essen and BaselBodo Vogt University of Magdeburg

Page 2: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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Research questions

• Elicitation of social preferences of indi-viduals deciding in allocation problems

• Choices more in line with utilitarian prin-ciples or more with some egalitarian rules?

• Framing effects (med vs. neutral)?• Professional effects (physicians vs. economists)?

Page 3: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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Overview

1. The allocation problem and possible solutions

2. Classification of distributors

3. Framing and professional effects

4. Who is being served and how much do they receive?

5. Conclusion

Page 4: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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• Economist / physician i = 0

• Endowment: ECU / time R

• 7 recipients / patients i = 1,...,7

• Recipients are differentiated acc. to- minimal needs mi

- productivity / effectivity pi

1. Allocation problem

Page 5: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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Payoff of recipient i

The allocator decides about the ration of the resources each of the recipients i receives: ri

0, if

if i i

ii i i i

r m

r p r m

ii

r R

Page 6: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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t: participation rate of the recipients‘ payoffs (20%)

c: Fine for every recipient with zero payoff (50 ECU)

„Induced“ preferences

Payoff of the allocator:

00i

ii i

t c

Page 7: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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Examples for allocation problems (3 out of 10)Ressource Endowments R{1000, 1600}

Person1 2 3 4 5 6 7

300 50 150 50 100 300 100 1050

4 3 3 2 3 5 4

200 100 10 50 50 10 100 520

4 2 1 2 3 2 3

300 200 500 100 100 200 300 1700

4 2 1 2 3 4 1

ii

m

im

ip

im

ip

im

ip

Page 8: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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Own payoff maximizer: Typ S (OPMA)Maximizes his own payoff, acts according to the induced

preferences

WS (0 , 1 ,...,n) = 0

Be i the most productive person, person k is being served if

t mk pk > t mk pi - c .

Residual endowment goes to the most productive individual

2. Classification of allocators(ideal types)

Page 9: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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Modified dominance criterion for serving k:

0 1 2 0, , ,..., U n ii

W

11 1k k kt m p t m p c

Hurdle is higher

Utilitarian: Typ U (UA)

Page 10: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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maximizes

Priorization acc. to minimal need serves to overcome

i=0

If the residual endowment is not sufficient to serve a

further person, the allocator is indifferent as to which

person is being served and who receives the residual.

Number maximizer: Typ N (NMA)

0 1 2

0, if 0, , ,..., with

1, if 0i

N n i ii i

W N N

Page 11: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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Priorization according ot minimal need (like NMA)

Allocates the residual resources according to the leximin-criterion

He serves persons with low mi pi within the set of recipients

Rawlsian: Typ R (RA)

Page 12: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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Experimental design /1

• 10 treatments• 1 distributor• 7 potential recipients

• 10 x 7 choices for each distributor

1000,1600R

Page 13: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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Experimental design /2

17 Sessions with 136 students in total 2 different „framings“: neutral, medical

22 advanced medical students(8 in the neutral, 14 in the medical frame )

36 students in economics(21 in the neutral, 15 in the medical frame )

MaXLab Magdeburg, elfe Essen

Page 14: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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2. Classification of allocators

FramingEconomists

neutral med. Physicians

neutral med.

S Max payoff 6 2 8 1 1 2

1 2 3 1 1 2

NMax number 10 6 16 2 4 6

0 2 2 2 3 5

RRawls 2 1 3 3 4 7

not classified 2 2 4 0 1 1

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• Type of allocators are more clearly revealed unter familiar conditions:

- Economist in the neutral frame, Types S and N

- Physicians in the medical frame, types N uad R

• in both frames, physician more clearly deviate from the induced direction (toward altruistic behavior)

• Economist deviate more from the induced direction in the neutral frame

General observations tested for

Page 16: Which Patient do I treat? Economists and Physicians in the Lab

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3. Framing and professional effects

Type OPMA NMA RA

Faculty Framing effect (medical vs. neutral setting)

Economists 1.45*** 1.26* 1.10 Physicians (1/1.29)** (1/1.20) (1/1.08)

Faculty effect (physicians vs. economists)

1.28** 1.12 (1/1.19)**

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Hypothesis set 1• All allocators prioritize persons with low minimal

need• Typ S has a strong positive interest to serve

persons with high productivity

5. Who is being served and by how much?

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logit-model for positive payoffs of the recipients

• The endowment has a positive effect on the likelihood of being served

• All allocator serve those persons more likely who have a low minimial need (holds for types N and R)

• All allocator serve those persons more likely who have a high productivity (holds for types S and N

5. Who is being served and by how much?

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5. Who is being served and by how much?

Hypotheses set 2

• Typ S und Typ N will serve those recipient

extra, who show a high productivity

• Rawlsian will increase the extra ration for those,

who have a long initial payoff

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Size of allocation, given the payoff is positive

Variables Coefficient Std. err.

Constant -49.81 *** 15.68

OPMA -161.24 *** 27.03

NMA -52.12 ** 20.53

RA -6.12 17.07

Endowment 14.99 10.60

Minimum need -0.02 0.02

Productivity 60.12 *** 4.61

OPMA . productivity 53.85 *** 8.73

NMA . productivity 2.84 6.47

RA . productivity . minimum need -0.08 *** 0.01

Number of observations = 2,973 Number of Groups = 58

R²: within = 0.169 R²: between = 0.279 R²: overall = 0.175

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• We are able to identify types, who systematically differ

from each other

• Distributive norms show up more clearly under

conditions familiar to the allocators (oec,oec; med,med)

• Productivity (+) und minimal need (-) influence the

probability of being served

Conclusion