On Measuring Compassion in Social Preferences Do Gender, Price of Giving, or Inequality Matter?

L. Kamas, A. Preston
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

This paper incorporates compassion into social preferences and tracks individuals' choices over ten allocation decisions, categorizing participants' behavior more precisely than previous work. We provide important evidence relevant to the on-going debate as to whether social preferences are better characterized as inequity aversion or social surplus maximization. We find social preferences to be heterogeneous: approximately two-thirds of participants exhibit consistent preferences in all ten exercises and other-regarding individuals are almost evenly split between inequity aversion and social surplus maximization. Women are significantly more likely than men to be inequity averters and less likely to be social surplus maximizers. A large majority of participants choose one or more allocations consistent with compassion but which reduce own payoff, increase inequality, or reduce social surplus. Individuals respond to lower prices of giving by being less self-interested and to larger payoff gaps by being more compassionate. Men are more responsive than women to the price of giving because they are more often social surplus maximizers who react more to costs while women are more often inequity averters who are less sensitive to the price of giving.
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衡量社会偏好中的同情心:性别、付出的代价还是不平等重要吗?
本文将同情心纳入社会偏好,并跟踪个人在十种分配决策中的选择,比以前的工作更精确地对参与者的行为进行分类。我们为正在进行的辩论提供了重要的证据,即社会偏好是否更好地表征为不平等厌恶或社会盈余最大化。我们发现社会偏好是异质的:大约三分之二的参与者在所有十个练习中都表现出一致的偏好,而与其他相关的个人在不平等厌恶和社会盈余最大化之间几乎平分。女性明显比男性更倾向于避免不平等,而不太可能成为社会盈余最大化者。大多数参与者选择一种或多种与同情一致的分配,但这会减少自己的收益,增加不平等,或减少社会盈余。个人对较低的捐赠价格的反应是不那么自利,对较大的回报差距的反应是更有同情心。男人比女人对付出的代价更敏感,因为他们往往是社会盈余最大化者,对付出的代价反应更大,而女人往往是不平等回避者,对付出的代价不太敏感。
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