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Economics of Altruism

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Title: Economics of Altruism


1
Economics of Altruism
2
Singers Lake
3
What type of person are you?
  • Emotional intelligence
  • Altruism quiz
  • Empathy quotient

4
Are Economists less altruistic by nature?
5
Homo economicusECONS - Thaler
  • Humans are rational, self-interested actors
  • Origin
  • Term used by critics of John Stuart Mills work on
    political economy in 1936
  • Mills
  • man is a being who inevitably does that by
    which he may obtain the greatest amount of
    necessaries, conveniences, and luxuries, with the
    smallest quantity of labour and physical
    self-denial with which they can be obtained.

6
ADAM SMITH
  • 18th century Scottish philosopher
  • Wealth of Nations
  • Competition is good
  • Invisible hand
  • By pursuing his own interest, he frequently
    promotes that of the society more effectually
    than when he really intends to promote it.

7
Limitations of selfish rationality
  • Sen Absurdity of selfish rationality
  • Imagine a man asks a stranger for directions.
  • "Where is the railway station?" he asks.
  • "There," she says, pointing at the post office,
    "and would you please post this letter for me on
    the way?"
  • "Yes," he says, determined to open the envelope
    and check whether it contains something valuable.

8
Adam Smiths largely ignored softer side..
  • The Theory of Moral Sentiments
  • How selfish soever man may be supposed, there
    are evidently some principles in his nature,
    which interest him in the fortune of others and
    render their happiness necessary to him, though
    he derives nothing from it except the pleasure of
    seeing it.

9
HUMANS VS. ECONS
  • HUMANS
  • do not always use cost/benefit analysis to make
    decisions
  • things unrelated to money are important
  • can be distracted, impulsive, and inconsistent
  • ECONS
  • rational decision makers
  • use cost/benefit analysis
  • Maximize individual satisfaction

10
First homework
  • Read Chapter 1 of Born to Be Good by Dacher
    Keltner, Prof. Psychology, UC Berkeley(available
    as link on class webpage)
  • Do assignment posted on webpage for next class

11
First altruism assignmentGet educated and get
involvedSat. Jan. 14 830 - 1
12
Altruism in animals2008 2 feral dogs in
Santiago, Chile
13
Are humans and animals hard wired for selfishness?
  • Pursue self interest
  • 1954 study rats press bar for hours on end that
    stimulates the pleasure center of the brain
    (septum) when neither hungry or thirsty
  • Compete with others Darwinism, survival of the
    fittest (Herbert Spencer)
  • Prioritize the bad poison berry, hidden snake
  • - Losing 20 elicits stronger reaction than
    finding 20

14
Reasons for altruism in animals
  • inclusive fitness
  • generous act benefits other who share the same
    genes allowing for the propogation of owns own
    genes
  • reciprocal altruism
  • generous act is eventually reciprocated

15
The Compassionate Instinct A Darwinian Tale of
Survival of the Kindest -Dacher Keltner
16
Efficiency of altruism
17
Rational choice theory
  • Choices made by individuals reflect their desire
    to minimize costs and maximize benefits
  • Utility function

18
Does make us happy?
  • Mixed results
  • -Correlation between GDP/capita and
    self-reported happiness
  • -loss of income affects happiness (Mankiw)
  • -surveys asking How happy are you with your life
    right now? find most important determinants of
    happiness are
  • -romantic bonds
  • -health of family
  • -time with friends
  • -connection to communities
  • When jen ratios are high, so are we

19
  • Law of diminishing marginal utility the utility
    that any consumer derives from successive units
    of a product diminishes as the total consumption
    of the product increases, ceteris paribus.

20
law of spoiled kids!!!
21
Economic Approaches to Population Issues
  • MICROECONOMIC HOUSEHOLD THEORY OF FERTILITY
  • based on theory of consumer behavior
  • assumptions
  • children are a consumer good and/or investment
    good
  • women are rational in their decision making
    process of having children
  • number of surviving children Cd Cd f(Y,Pc, Px
    (P other goods), tx( taste for other goods)) x
    1.......n
  • graph

22
Economic Approaches to Population Issues
  • caveats
  • Are children a normal good?
  • non-pecuniary benefits hard to measure
  • Does the law of diminishing marginal utility hold
    for children?

23
See Becker, G. A Treatise on the Family, 1981
24
Extensions of model new ideas
  • Nancy Folbre feminist economist The Invisible
    Heart, 2001
  • Economic models undervalue contributions of women
    providing care
  • Care work that involves connecting to other
    people, trying to help people meet their needs,
    things like the work of caring for children,
    caring for the elderly, caring for sick people or
    teaching is a form of caring labor.
  • can be paid or unpaid

25
Nancy Folbre
  • Children are not pets!
  • Children as public goods

26
Public goods
  • Non-rival
  • consumption of the good by one individual does
    not reduce availability of the good for
    consumption by others
  • Non-excludable
  • no one can be effectively excluded from using
    the good

27
Empirical evidence
  • Poor countries have higher fertility rates
  • But new evidence shows that rich countries with
    high female labor participation have MORE babies
  • -why? Better support for working mothers
  • (flexible hours, childcare)

28
BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS EXPERIMENTS IN ALTRUISM
29
INEQUALITY
  • Constructive inequality differential rewards to
    skill and effort lead to economic growth
  • Destructive inequality dysfunctional workings of
    an economy that slows its own growth by blocking
    the accumulation and income-generating
    opportunities of the poor

30
Game Theory
  • Game theory study of interacting decision makers
    whose payoffs depend on the actions of both
  • Collusion Economic agents formally agree to
    coordinate their activities to increase their
    joint profit / benefit
  • dominant strategy a strategy that is best for a
    player in a game regardless of the strategies
    chosen by the other players
  • Nash equilibrium a situation in which economic
    actors interacting with one another each choose
    their best strategy given the strategies that all
    others have chosen

31
Ultimatum game
  • Player 1 gets and makes an offer to player 2
  • Player 2 can accept offer or reject, resulting in
    neither player keeping the
  • Offers some evidence against the presence of
    rational, self-interest

32
RESULTS
  • Economic theory predicts that ECONS should offer
    0.01 and their rational partners should accept
  • However, 71 of HUMANS offer between 40 and 50
    of their money

33
Class ultimatum experimentWould it matter if
touch were involved?
  • Winning Touch NBA Teams that Touch the Most Win
    the Most, Study Says

34
Dictator
  • Not technically a game since only one person has
    decision making power
  • Dictator decides how much money to give second
    player
  • Offers some evidence against the presence of
    rational, self-interest

35
Dictator variant
  • Anonymity
  • Half class goes outside
  • Dictators do not reveal identity

36
Trust game
  • Player 2 decides how much to give to dictator
  • is tripled by Professor (matching amount will
    vary)
  • Dictator decides how much to give Player 2

37
The gruesome case of the Chinese toddler left for
deadOct. 2011
38
Empathy fatigue
  • Emotional detachment brought about by prolonged
    emotional exposure

39
MOTIVATIONS FOR ALTRUISM
  1. Ethics
  2. Reciprocity
  3. Business strategy

40
ALTRUISM MOTIVATED BY ETHICS
  • Is economics really about rational, self
    interested actors?

41
Living a life of altruism
  • Quotes of Mother Teresa
  • We cannot all do great things, but we can do
    small things with great love.
  • It is a kingly act to assist the fallen.
  • If you can't feed a hundred people, then feed
    just one.

42
Golden Ladder of Giving-Moses Maimonides, Jewish
scholar, 1135-1202 AD
  1. Giving unwillingly.
  2. Giving willingly but inadequately.
  3. Giving adequately after being asked.
  4. Giving before being asked.
  5. Giving to an unknown recipient.
  6. Giving anonymously to a known recipient.
  7. Giving anonymously to an unknown recipient.
  8. Giving to prevent poverty by teaching a trade,
    setting a man up in business, or in some other
    way preventing the need of charity

43
BLOOD BANK EXPERIMENTKansas City and
DenverCornell University 1973
  • CONTROL
  • Sent letter asking
  • them to volunteer
  • to give blood
  • TREATMENT
  • Sent letter
  • offering to pay
  • them 10
  • to give blood

44
WHICH GROUP GAVE MORE?
  • PAID DONORS
  • 65 gave blood
  • VOLUNTEERS
  • 93 gave blood

45
WHATS GOING ON?!
  • Crowding out
  • People perform certain tasks for the common good
    but their motivation is crowded out if they are
    offered a financial reward.
  • -theory by Richard Titmuss, British social
    researcher

46
ALTRUISM AS A FORM OF RECIPROCITY
47
ALTRUISM AS A BUSINESS STRATEGY
  • Strategy to become part of community
  • Positive public image
  • Signal of high product quality
  • Develop social skills to enhance client
    relationships
  • Inspired employees

48
EVERY DAY COMPASSION AT GOOGLEChade-Meng Tan
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