Income inequality and cooperative propensities in developing economies: Summarizing the preliminary experimental evidence
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Date
2016
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to examine the influence of income inequality on cooperative propensities, and thus the ability of individuals to resolve collective action dilemmas.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper presents a meta-study of 32 developing country lab experiments correlating cooperative behaviour with prevailing Gini coefficients. Furthermore, the paper conducts standard dictator- and public goods game (PGG) experiments with culturally and demographically similar subject pools in two West African countries characterized by high and persistent variation in national income inequality.
Findings
The meta-study findings of a significant negative relationship between income inequality and contribution levels in the PGG are corroborated by the own laboratory experimental findings that participants in more unequal Nigeria are significantly less altruistic and exhibit significantly lower propensities to cooperate than their more egalitarian Ghanaian counterparts. Moreover, the latter findings are robust when controlling for personal income levels.
Practical implications
The findings have nontrivial implications for collective action theorists and practitioners seeking to elicit tacit cooperation in developing countries.
Originality/value
The major contributions of this paper are the novel meta-analysis and the first attempt to examine the influence of personal income levels on cooperative behaviour in societies characterized by differential levels of income inequality.
Description
Keywords
Public Goods Game, Dictator Game, Meta-Analysis, Income Inequality, Developing Countries
Citation
Stephen Mark Rosenbaum, Stephan Billinger, Daniel Kwabena Twerefou, Wakeel Atanda Isola, (2016) "Income inequality and cooperative propensities in developing economies: Summarizing the preliminary experimental evidence", International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 43 Issue: 12, pp.1460-1480, https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSE-04-2015-0109