The development of social preferences

Ramon Cobo-Reyes, Jose J. Dominguez, Fernando Garcia-Quero, Brit Grosskopf, Juan Antonio Lacomba-Arias, Francisco Lagos-Garcia, Tracy Xiao Liu, Graeme Pearce

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This paper examines how social preferences develop with age. This is done using a range of mini-dictator games from which we classify 665 subjects into a variety of behavioural types. We expand on previous developmental studies of pro-sociality and parochialism by analysing individuals aged 9–67, and by employing a cross country study where participants from Spain interact with participants from different ethnic groups (Arab, East Asian, Black and White) belonging to different countries (Morocco, China, Senegal and Spain). We identify a ‘U-shaped’ relationship between age and egalitarianism that had previously gone unnoticed, and appeared linear. An inverse “U-shaped” relationship is found to be true for altruism. A gender differential is found to emerge in teenage years, with females becoming less altruistic but more egalitarian than males. In contrast to the majority of previous economic studies of the development of social preferences, we report evidence of increased altruism, and decreased egalitarianism and spite expressed towards black individuals from Senegal.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)653-666
JournalJournal of Economic Behavior and Organization
Volume179
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2020

Keywords

  • Social preferences
  • Children
  • Mini-Dictator game
  • Cross-country comparisons
  • Artefactual field experiment

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