This article provides an experimental investigation of third parties’ sanctioning
behavior, in order to understand whether public officials (e.g., judges, politicians,
or regulators), when deciding about top-down interventions aimed at
punishing wrongdoers, are sensitive to bottom-up pressure on the part of ordinary
citizens, who are the major victims of wrongdoers’ behavior. We set up a
novel five-treatment design and compare situations where a wrongdoer acts
under: (1) no third-party punishment; (2) nonaccountable third-party punishment;
and (3) accountable third-party punishment. We show that when citizens
are active and make their voice heard, public officials sanction wrongdoing
significantly more. Our experimental finding complements previous empirical
work based on field data and suggests that when third-party institutions are held
accountable, their propensity to fight misconduct is higher, other things equal.
We view this result as good news with regard to domains where it implies that
pro-consumer policies will be more likely (e.g., regulatory policies). The risk of
pandering by elected officials and the danger of poorly informed decisions by
the citizens are the flip side of the argument.
|