The long shadow of income on trustworthiness
John Ermisch and
Diego Gambetta
No 2011-08, ISER Working Paper Series from Institute for Social and Economic Research
Abstract:
We employ a behavioural measure of trustworthiness obtained from an experiment carried out with a sample of the general British population whose individuals were extensively interviewed on earlier occasions. Our basic finding is that given past income, higher current income increases trustworthiness and, given current income, higher past income reduces trustworthiness. Past income determines the level of financial aspirations and whether or not these are fulfilled by the level of current income affects trustworthiness. We also suspect that past income may also capture heterogeneity in relevant subjects' dispositions, with more opportunistic subjects being less trustworthy and having higher average incomes.
Date: 2011-03-22
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-cbe and nep-mic
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Working Paper: The Long Shadow of Income on Trustworthiness (2011) 
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