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α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
We study theoretically and in a lab-experiment investment decisions in environments where property rights are absent. In our setting a player chooses an investment level before interacting repeatedly with a given set of agents. The investment stochastically affects the payoffs of the game in every subsequent period. We show that more volatile returns make investment more difficult in the absence of legal protection, and might force the investor to invest more to guarantee cooperation. Experimental results are broadly consistent with the theoretical findings.