Moral hypocrisy and the dichotomy of hypothetical versus real choices in prosocial behavior

•This study investigates differences between real and hypothetical prosocial choices.•Participants took more money from a public budget than from a charity.•Surprisingly, taking from the charity did not decrease in hypothetical scenarios.•Participants underestimated how much would be taken from char...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of economic psychology Vol. 105; p. 102772
Main Authors: Vranka, Marek, Houdek, Petr
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier B.V 01-12-2024
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Summary:•This study investigates differences between real and hypothetical prosocial choices.•Participants took more money from a public budget than from a charity.•Surprisingly, taking from the charity did not decrease in hypothetical scenarios.•Participants underestimated how much would be taken from charities hypothetically.•Results highlight limited generalizability from hypothetical to real prosocial behavior. We have examined how much money participants take for themselves from an amount designated either for a well-known charity or for a state’s public budget. For a third of the participants, the decision was real – they were paid the chosen amount afterward, and the donation to a charity or public budget was lowered by this amount. For the rest, the decision was hypothetical, with no consequences. In a follow-up study, a different sample of participants was tasked with estimating behavior in both conditions. As expected, participants took more money from the public budget than the charity. However, when the decision was hypothetical, they took less money only from the public budget. Participants who could take money from the charity did not take less in the hypothetical than in the real condition. This was unexpected also for participants in the follow-up study, who significantly underestimated the amount of money taken from charities in the hypothetical condition. The results highlight limited generalizability of findings regarding moral and prosocial choices that use only hypothetical or vignette scenarios and suggest that interactions between positive self-presentation and monetary incentives are more context-dependent than expected.
ISSN:0167-4870
DOI:10.1016/j.joep.2024.102772