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Financial deprivation selectively shifts moral standards and compromises moral decisions
Authors:Eesha Sharma  Nina Mazar  Adam L. Alter  Dan Ariely
Affiliation:1. Tuck School of Business, Dartmouth College, 100 Tuck Drive, Hanover, NH 03755, USA;2. Joseph L. Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto, 105 St. George Street, Toronto, ON M5S 3E6, Canada;3. Leonard N. Stern School of Business, New York University, 40 West 4th St., New York, NY 10012, USA;4. Fuqua School of Business, Duke University, 2024 W. Main Street, C103, Box 90420, Durham, NC 27705, USA
Abstract:Previous research suggests people firmly value moral standards. However, research has also shown that various factors can compromise moral behavior. Inspired by the recent financial turmoil, we investigate whether financial deprivation might shift people’s moral standards and consequently compromise their moral decisions. Across one pilot survey and five experiments, we find that people believe financial deprivation should not excuse immoral conduct; yet when people actually experience deprivation they seem to apply their moral standards more leniently. Thus, people who feel deprived tend to cheat more for financial gains and judge deprived moral offenders who cheat for financial gains less harshly. These effects are mediated by shifts in people’s moral standards: beliefs in whether deprivation is an acceptable reason for immorality. The effect of deprivation on immoral conduct diminishes when it is explicit that immoral conduct cannot help alleviate imbalances in deprived actors’ financial states, when financial deprivation seems fair or deserved, and when acting immorally seems unfair.
Keywords:Ethics   Fairness   Morality   Dishonesty   Cheating   Lying   Scarcity   Judgment and decision making
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