Market Responses to Genuine Versus Strategic Generosity: An Empirical Examination of NFT Charity Fundraisers
Author:
Chen Liang, Murat Tunc, Gordon Burtch
Keyword:
Economics, General Economics, General Economics (econ.GN), Human-Computer Interaction (cs.HC)
journal:
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date:
2024-01-22 00:00:00
Abstract
Crypto donations now represent a significant fraction of charitable giving worldwide. Nonfungible token (NFT) charity fundraisers, which involve the sale of NFTs of artistic works with the proceeds donated to philanthropic causes, have emerged as a novel development in this space. A unique aspect of NFT charity fundraisers is the significant potential for donors to reap financial gains from the rising value of purchased NFTs. Questions may arise about the motivations of donors in these charity fundraisers, resulting in a negative social image. NFT charity fundraisers thus offer a unique opportunity to understand the economic consequences of a donor's social image. We investigate these effects in the context of a large NFT charity fundraiser. We identify the causal effect of purchasing an NFT within the charity fundraiser on a donor's later market outcomes by leveraging random variation in transaction processing times on the blockchain. Further, we demonstrate a clear pattern of heterogeneity, based on an individual's decision to relist (versus hold) the purchased charity NFTs (a sign of strategic generosity), and based on an individual's degree of social exposure within the NFT marketplace. We show that charity-NFT "relisters" experience significant penalties in the market, in terms of the prices they are able to command on other NFT listings, particularly among those who relist quickly and those who are more socially exposed. Our study underscores the growing importance of digital visibility and traceability, features that characterize crypto-philanthropy, and online philanthropy more broadly.