Journal Article10.1016/j.jesp.2023.104530
Attributional ambiguity reduces charitable giving by relaxing social norms
Fiona tho Pesch,Jason Dana +1 more
2
TL;DR: Attributional ambiguity significantly reduces charitable giving by weakening social norms, allowing individuals to justify keeping more money for themselves, rather than using a preference for one charity over another as an excuse.
read more
Abstract: A growing literature demonstrates reluctant giving: Many people who voluntarily give to charity no longer do so when they have an excuse not to give. The mechanisms of reluctance, however, remain unclear. Consistent with this literature, we found that injecting attributional ambiguity into a real charitable decision significantly reduces donations. Participants in our studies (N = 2147) faced a binary choice between options for distributing money between themselves and a charity, with one option giving more to a charity and the other leaving more for themselves. Borrowing from a classic attributional ambiguity paradigm, we manipulated whether the charity involved was the same for both options or different, giving participants the possible excuse of keeping more money due to preferring one charity over another. Participants indeed kept more for themselves when there were two different charities, regardless of which charity was associated with the more self-beneficial option, ostensibly revealing a hidden preference for selfishness. Using incentive compatible elications, we found no evidence that participants used the excuse of preferring one charity to another to justify their choices. Instead, we find that attributional ambiguity weakened perceptions that there is a norm against keeping more money in the task, both among decision makers and disinterested third parties. We conclude that attributional ambiguity lowers donations by relieving internalized social pressure to give.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Reactions to Mega-Threats Among Members of the Harming Group:A Moral Cleansing Approach
Daphna Motro,Aleksander P. J. Ellis +1 more
- 01 Jan 2024
Reciprocity in ambiguous situations: Default psychological strategies underlying ambiguity resolution in moral decision-making
TL;DR: Reciprocity in ambiguous situations is influenced by prior trust and is based on general trust beliefs.
References
Internalizing Norms: A Cognitive Model of Social Norms' Internalization
TL;DR: This article advocates a rich cognitive model of different types, degrees and factors of internalization and will be implemented on a normative agent platform to simulate the individual and social effect ofinternalization.
Giving Versus Giving In
TL;DR: The distinction between giving and giving in is not only central from a theoretical standpoint, but also has important methodological implications for researchers trying to study prosocial behavior and practitioners trying to encourage it as mentioned in this paper.
Effects of Cost and Benefit of Prosocial Behavior on Reputation
TL;DR: Prosocial behavior consists of a cost to the actor and a benefit of others as discussed by the authors, and it has been shown that prosocial actors generally receive positive social evaluations from observers However,
negotiating with Yourself and Losing: Making Decisions with Competing Internal Preferences
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose that one form of intrapersonal conflict is the result of tension between what people want to do versus what they think they should do, and argue that this want/should distinction helps to explain the multiple-self phenomenon and a recently discovered group of preference reversals noted in behavioral decision and organizational behavior research.
•Posted Content
Altruism in Anonymous Dictator Games
TL;DR: The authors conducted double-anonymous dictator experiments to explore the role of altruism in motivating subjects' behavior and concluded that subjects are rational in the way they incorporate fairness into their decisions, and that a significant increase in donations occurs when they increase the extent to which a donation goes to a recipient generally agreed to be "deserving".