Judgment and Decision Making (Jan 2018)

Cross-national in-group favoritism in prosocial behavior: Evidence from Latin and North America

  • Susann Fiedler,
  • Dshamilja Marie Hellmann,
  • Angela Rachael Dorrough,
  • Andreas Glöckner

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 42 – 60

Abstract

Read online

As individuals from different nations increasingly interact with each other, research on national in-group favoritism becomes particularly vital. In a cross-national, large-scale study (N = 915) including representative samples from four Latin American nations (Chile, Peru, Colombia, Venezuela) and the USA, we explore differences regarding nationality-based in-group favoritism. In-group favoritism is assessed through differences in prosocial behavior towards persons from the own nation as compared to persons from other nations in fully incentivized one-shot dictator games. We find strong evidence for national in-group favoritism for the overall sample, but also significant differences among national subsamples. Latin Americans show more national in-group favoritism compared to US Americans (interacting with Latin Americans). While US Americans mainly follow an equal split norm (for both in- and out-group interactions), Latin Americans do so only in in-group interactions. The magnitude of in-group favoritism increases with social distance towards the out-group.

Keywords