What price do you ask for the "Extra One"?: A social value orientation perspective

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Chien-Huang Lin
Hung-Ming Lin
Cite this article:  Lin, C., & Lin, H. (2007). What price do you ask for the "Extra One"?: A social value orientation perspective. Social Behavior and Personality: An international journal, 35(1), 9-18.


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The concept of social value orientation was used to explore individuals' decisions in asking price when they had an "extra one" that someone wanted to buy. Results from an experimental study indicated that competitors' asking price was higher than those of individualists, who in turn asked higher prices than did prosocials. Regardless of the social value orientation, participants charged a significantly lower price for the "extra one" if the buyer was a friend rather than a stranger. In addition, for prosocials, market price was not an important consideration when they decided the asking price, and they exhibited cooperative behavior only under the situation of no loss.

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Appreciation is due to anonymous reviewers.

Hung-Ming Lin, Department of Business Administration, Ming Hsin University of Science and Technology, No. 1 Hsin Hsing Road, Hsinchu 30401, Taiwan. Phone: +886-937-162-433; Fax: +886-3-559 3142 #3573; Email: [email protected].edu.tw. Correspondence through email is preferred.

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