Altruism
Altruism is the desire to help others, motivated by a selfless concern for their well-being, even when the personal costs of helping are greater than the potential benefits. Individuals acting altruistically may completely disregard the significant risks or sacrifices to themselves.
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Economics
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The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Introduction to Psychology @ OpenStax Course
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OpenStax Psychology (2nd ed.) Textbook
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Ch.12 Social Psychology - Psychology @ OpenStax
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Altruism
Inequality Aversion
Spite and Envy as Social Preferences
An individual is offered two ways to split a bonus between themselves and a colleague. In Option 1, the individual gets $100 and the colleague gets $20. In Option 2, both the individual and the colleague get $80. The individual chooses Option 2. This decision to accept a lower personal payoff in favor of a perfectly even distribution is the clearest demonstration of which type of social preference?
Analyzing a Competitive Decision
Match each scenario with the type of social preference it best illustrates.
Distinguishing Motivations for Fairness
An individual is given the choice between two outcomes. Outcome A: they receive $10 and another person receives $18. Outcome B: they receive $9 and the other person receives $9. If the individual chooses Outcome B, this action exclusively demonstrates that their utility is negatively affected by the well-being of others.
Comparing Social Preference Models
Interpreting Choices to Identify Social Preferences
An individual's satisfaction from an outcome is represented by the utility function U(x_i, x_j) = x_i - 0.5 * x_j, where x_i is the individual's own monetary payoff and x_j is another person's monetary payoff. Based on this function, what type of social preference does this individual exhibit?
Illustrating Altruistic Preferences
Designing an Employee Bonus System
Predicting Citizen Participation
A technology firm introduced a policy where the employee who stayed latest in the office each day would receive a monthly 'Most Dedicated' award and a cash bonus. Management was surprised to find that after several months, overall project completion rates had declined and team morale was low. Which statement provides the most accurate analysis of this outcome?
Evaluating Public Policy Effectiveness
Evaluating a Behavioral Prediction Model
To accurately predict how people will behave, it is essential to understand their underlying motivations. Match each described behavior with the primary motivation most likely driving it.
A prediction model for charitable donations that only accounts for an individual's income level and tax incentives is likely to be highly accurate because it focuses on the primary rational, self-interested motivations for giving.
Designing Effective Public Policy
Analyzing a Municipal Recycling Program
Evaluating Water Conservation Policies
A municipal government wants to reduce water consumption during a drought. They find that a public awareness campaign emphasizing shared community responsibility and publishing neighborhood-level consumption data is more effective at changing behavior than a policy that only increases the price of water for high-volume users. Which of the following principles most accurately explains this outcome?
Altruism
Inequality Aversion
Individual Preferences as Motivators for Decisions
Self-Interest in Economic Models
Reciprocity
Altruism
Inequality Aversion
Spite and Envy as Social Preferences
Zoë's Dilemma with Lottery Winnings
Situational Nature of Social Preferences
In a one-time, anonymous interaction, Person A is given $20 and can offer any portion of it to Person B. Person B has no choice but to accept the offer. A model assuming individuals are motivated solely by their own financial gain would predict that Person A will offer $0 and keep the full $20. However, in real-world experiments, Person A often chooses to offer a positive amount (e.g., $5). Which of the following provides the best explanation for this observed behavior?
An economic model that incorporates the idea that individuals' utility can be influenced by the well-being of others will always predict more generous and cooperative outcomes compared to a model assuming individuals only care about their own direct payoffs.
Partnership Dissolution Decision
Each scenario below describes an individual's decision. Match each scenario to the underlying preference that best explains the behavior.
Analyzing a Bonus Split Decision
Evaluating Assumptions in Economic Models
When an individual's personal satisfaction or utility is affected by the material payoffs or well-being of other people, and not just their own, they are said to exhibit ____.
In which of the following scenarios does an individual's action provide the clearest evidence that their utility is influenced by more than just their own direct material payoff?
An individual whose utility is solely determined by their own material payoff will always choose a different course of action than an individual whose utility is also influenced by the well-being of others, given an identical set of choices that impact both individuals.
The Community Garden Decision
Altruism
Inequality Aversion
Positive Reciprocity
Reciprocity
Classification of Social Preferences
Learn After
Which of the following scenarios best illustrates an action driven by altruistic motivation, where an individual's primary goal is to increase another's well-being even at a personal cost?
Analyzing Corporate Motivation
Evaluating Altruism in Public Donations
An individual who makes a large, public donation to a charity primarily to enhance their social reputation is demonstrating altruistic behavior.
Distinguishing Motivations
Match each scenario with the primary economic motivation that best describes the action taken.
An individual spends their entire weekend helping a new neighbor move in. From an economic perspective, which of the following circumstances would most effectively argue that this action was NOT motivated by pure altruism?
Challenging Economic Assumptions
Fostering Community Volunteerism
A software engineer volunteers every Saturday morning at a local food bank. They state that it feels good to help others. However, they are also aware that their employer offers a prestigious 'Volunteer of the Year' award, which includes a significant cash bonus and public recognition. Which statement most accurately analyzes the engineer's motivation based on the principles of social preferences?
Belling the Cat Fable as an Example of a Social Dilemma
Self-Sacrifice in Disasters as an Example of Altruism
Example of Altruism: 9/11 World Trade Center Hero
Debate on Pure Altruism: Egoism vs. Selflessness