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【Workshop】How Competition Shapes Peer Effects: Evidence from a University in China

Topic:How Competition Shapes Peer Effects: Evidence from a University in China

Time:Dec. 22, 2021年, 10:00-11:30am

Speaker:CHEN Siyu, Assistant Professor at the Institute for Economic and Social Research, Jinan University

Tencent Meeting(Please send your info to 18701189960@163.com, PKU students only)

Competition is widely used to increase effort and performance. However, in many domains, performance not only depends on individual effort but also on cooperation between agents. In such cases, competition may decrease individual performance because it can weaken the cooperation between agents as the chance of winning a competition decreases with the success of peers. Education is a natural setting in which help from others can enhance individual performance. Using administrative data from a university in China, this paper examines how competition changes peer effects and peer interactions. We exploit randomly assigned roommates and show that high-ability roommates have slightly detrimental effects on the academic performance of high-ability students. More importantly, we provide novel evidence that negative peer effects significantly increase along various dimensions of competition intensity within dorm rooms. We conducted a survey to investigate potential mechanisms. The survey results reveal that competition discourages help and induces unfriendly behavior among roommates, which might explain our findings. Our study suggests that we cannot consider peer effects to be fixed but rather as being shaped by the competitive nature of the environment.