Litcius/Paper detail

Economic inequality reduces sense of control and increases the acceptability of self-interested unethical behavior.

Christopher To, Dylan Wiwad, Maryam Kouchaki

2023Journal of Experimental Psychology General17 citationsDOI

Abstract

= 4,851; preregistered), we manipulated perceived inequality and test several mediating pathways. Results point toward the importance of sense of control as a mechanism: Under conditions of high inequality, individuals report a lower sense of control, which increases the acceptability of self-interested unethical behaviors. As a supplement, we also explore associations regarding why high inequality reduces sense of control (reduced perceptions of social mobility) and why sense of control is associated with greater acceptability of unethical behavior (greater situational attributions). Overall, our results suggest inequality changes ethical standards by reducing one's sense of control, providing evidence for another pathway through which inequality harms societies. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

InequalitySocial psychologyPsycINFOSituational ethicsPsychologySocial inequalityEconomic inequalityAttributionControl (management)PerceptionSense of controlInequity aversionEconomicsPolitical scienceLawMEDLINEMathematicsManagementNeuroscienceMathematical analysisPsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentEthics in Business and EducationSocial and Intergroup Psychology