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ALTRUISM, EGOISM, AND THE ROLE OF SOCIAL CAPITAL IN THE PRIVATE PROVISION OF PUBLIC GOODS*

Bob Chirinko

Economics and Politics, 1990, vol. 2, issue 3, 275-290

Abstract: The economic approach to understanding human behavior has encountered serious difficulties when attempting to explain the private provision of public goods, such as voting and charitable contributions to large organizations. To gain insights into these important issues, this study takes an interdisciplinary approach. The individual is modeled formally in terms of dual egoistic/altruistic utilities, and the recursive relation between altruism and the existence and production of social capital is developed. The model is analyzed as a non‐cooperative game between the egoistic and altruistic selves. The socialized rational actor that results from the combination of social capital, dual utilities, and non‐cooperative behavior resolves a number of public goods paradoxes. Comparative statics and the dynamics of social capital formation are explored.

Date: 1990
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https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0343.1990.tb00034.x

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