
Public
release date: 26-Mar-2009
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Contact: Dr. Armin Falk
armin.falk@uni-bonn.de
49-228-739-240
University of Bonn
This release is
available in
German.
Vindictiveness doesn't pay.
This has been demonstrated by a current study at Bonn and Maastricht
Universities. According to this study, a person inclined to deal with
inequity on a tit-for-tat basis tends to experience more unemployment than
other people. Vindictive people also have less friends and are less
satisfied with their lives. The study appears in the current edition of the
Economic Journal.
We tend to live by the
motto "tit for tat". We repay an invitation to dinner with a
counter-invitation; when a friend helps us to move house, we help to move
his furniture a few months later. On the other hand, we repay meanness in
the same coin. Scientists speak here of reciprocity. A person who repays
friendly actions in a like manner is said to behave with positive
reciprocity, and one who avenges unfairness acts with negative reciprocity.
Positive and negative
reciprocity are interdependent traits: many people incline to positive
reciprocity, others more to negative; others, again, incline to both. The
researchers from Bonn and Maastricht wanted to discover what influence these
traits of character have on parameters such as "success" or "satisfaction
with life". For this, they resorted to data from the so-called
"socio-economic panel". This contains information gathered by the Deutsche
Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung (German Institute for economic Research)
in its annual surveys. These involve around 20,000 respondents from all over
Germany and cover a diversity of topics.
The researchers in Bonn
used this instrument to discover something about the attitudes to
reciprocity of the participants in the study. They were to state, for
example, to what extent they would repay a favour or, on the other hand, an
insult on a tit-for-tat basis. "Both positive and negative reciprocity are
widespread in Germany", declares Professor Dr. Armin Falk of Bonn
University, summarising the results.
Positively reciprocal
People perform more Overtime
The researchers then
related these data to other results of the survey, whereby they stumbled
upon a number of interesting correlations: "Thus, positively reciprocal
people tend on average to perform more overtime, but only when they find the
remuneration fair", declares Professor Dr. Thomas Dohmen of Maastricht
University. "As they are very sensitive to incentives, they also tend to
earn more money".
This is in stark contrast
to vindictive people. With these people, the equation "more money = more
work" does not always apply. Even pay cuts are not an effective means of
bringing negatively reciprocal people back into line. Ultimately the danger
arises that they will take revenge – for example, by refusing to work, or by
sabotage. "On the basis of these theoretical considerations it would be
natural to expect that negatively reciprocal people are more likely to lose
their jobs", Falk explains: "A supposition which coincides with our results.
Consequently, negatively reciprocal people experience a significantly higher
rate of unemployment".
And in other respects, too,
vindictiveness is not a maxim to be recommended. Anyone who prefers to act
according to the Old Testament motto of "An eye for an eye, and a tooth for
a tooth" has on average less friends – and is clearly less than satisfied
with his or her life.
###
Contact:
Professor Dr. Armin Falk
Institut für Gesellschafts- und Wirtschaftswissenschaften, Universität Bonn
Telephone: 0228/73-9240
E-Mail: armin.falk@uni-bonn.de
Professor Dr. Thomas Dohmen
Universität Maastricht
Telephone: 0031/43 388 3647
E-Mail: t.dohmen@roa.unimaas.nl
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