CeDEx
Centre for Decision Research and Experimental Economics

CeDEx 2010-09: Culture and Cooperation

Abstract

Does the cultural background influence the success with which genetically unrelated individuals cooperate in social dilemma situations? In this paper we provide an answer by analyzing the data of Herrmann et al. (Science 2008, pp. 1362-1367), who study cooperation and punishment in sixteen subject pools from six different world cultures (as classified by Inglehart & Baker (American Sociological Review 2000, pp. 19-51)). We use analysis of variance to disentangle the importance of cultural background relative to individual heterogeneity and group-level differences in cooperation. We find that culture has a substantial influence on the extent of cooperation, in addition to individual heterogeneity and group-level differences identified by previous research. The significance of this result is that cultural background has a substantial influence on cooperation in otherwise identical environments. This is particularly true in the presence of punishment opportunities.

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Now published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B – Biological Sciences

Authors

Simon Gächter, Benedikt Herrmann and Christian Thöni

 

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Posted on Saturday 1st May 2010

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