Punishment

Monetary and Non-Monetary Punishment in Public Goods Games: Comparing Teams with Individuals

(*joint with [John Kagel](https://www.asc.ohio-state.edu/kagel.4/) and [Christina Gore](https://christinagore.org/)*) We investigate behavior in Public Goods Games under both monetary and non-monetary punishment options with teams of two as decision makers. We find that teams are teams contribute significantly lower under non-monetary punishment, compared to monetary punishment.