"Do the right thing" for whom? An experiment on ingroup favouritism, group assorting and moral suasion

Article


Bilancini, E., Boncinelli, L., Capraro, V., Celadin, T. and Di Paolo, R. 2020. "Do the right thing" for whom? An experiment on ingroup favouritism, group assorting and moral suasion. Judgment and Decision Making. 15 (2), pp. 182-192.
TypeArticle
Title"Do the right thing" for whom? An experiment on ingroup favouritism, group assorting and moral suasion
AuthorsBilancini, E., Boncinelli, L., Capraro, V., Celadin, T. and Di Paolo, R.
Abstract

In this paper we investigate the effect of moral suasion on ingroup favouritism. We report a well-powered, pre-registered, two-stage 2x2 mixed-design experiment. In the first stage, groups are formed on the basis of how participants answer to a set of questions, concerning non-morally relevant issues in one treatment (assorting on non-moral preferences), and morally relevant issues in another treatment (assorting on moral preferences). In the second stage, participants choose how to split a given amount of money between participants of their own group and participants of the other group, first in the baseline setting and then in a setting where they are told to do what they believe to be morally right (moral suasion). Our main results are: (i) in the baseline, participants tend to favour their own group to a greater extent when groups are assorted according to moral preferences, compared to when they are assorted according to non-moral preferences; (ii) the net effect of moral suasion is to decrease ingroup favouritism, but there is also a non-negligible proportion of participants for whom moral suasion increases ingroup favouritism; (iii) the effect of moral suasion is substantially stable across group assorting and four pre-registered individual characteristics (gender, political orientation, religiosity, pro-life vs pro-choice ethical convictions).

PublisherThe Society for Judgment and Decision Making, and The European Association for Decision Making
JournalJudgment and Decision Making
ISSN1930-2975
Electronic1930-2975
Publication dates
Print31 Mar 2020
Publication process dates
Deposited28 Feb 2020
Accepted27 Feb 2020
Output statusPublished
Publisher's version
Copyright Statement

Copyright: © 2020. The authors license this article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.

Web address (URL)http://journal.sjdm.org/19/191113/jdm191113.pdf
LanguageEnglish
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