Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
In a laboratory experiment, we incentivize participants to make donations to a real-world charity. By randomizing the income distribution, we identify a causal effect of inequality on giving behavior. On both the intensive and extensive margins, donations fall when inequality is higher. Our results conflict with theories that predict greater inequality increases charitable giving, but are consistent with other empirical evidence that charitable giving is lower when inequality increases. We present a model where the income distribution directly affects the marginal utility of charitable giving, making a negative inequality-giving relationship possible.