CMI (Chr. Michelsen Institute) Development Studies and Human Rights
 
 

Share |
CMI Working Paper

Rich Meets Poor - an International Fairness Experiment

CMI authors:
Bertil Tungodden

Thematic research group:
Rights, Democracy and Development
Poverty Reduction

Geographical keywords:
Sub-Saharan Africa
Tanzania, Uganda

Alexander W. Cappelen, Karl Ove Moene, Erik Ø. Sørensen, Bertil Tungodden (2008)

Bergen: Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI Working Paper WP 2008: 10) 29 p.

[pdf] Download publication

Why do people in rich countries not transfer more of their income to people in the world's poorest countries? To study this question and the relative importance of needs, entitlements, and nationality in people's social preferences, we conducted a real effort fairness experiment where people in two of the world's richest countries, Norway and Germany, interacted directly with people in Uganda and Tanzania, two of the world's poorest countries. In this experiment, the participants were given the opportunity to transfer money to poor persons with whom they were matched. The study provides four main findings. First, entitlement considerations are crucial in explaining the distributive behavior of rich people in the experiment; second, needs considerations matter a lot for some participants; third, the participants acted as moral cosmopolitans; and finally, the participants' choices are consistent with a self-serving bias in their social preferences.

[pdf] Rich Meets Poor - an International Fairness Experiment

Rights, Democracy and Development
News

17 September
New Media - Tools for Empowering Citizens?

Rohan Jayasekera, Associate Editor and Deputy Chief Executive of Index on Censorship, explores to what extent new media is a tool which may contribute to empower citizens. Read more

Media constraints in Sub-Saharan Africa

Democratic elections depend on a free press. "Free and fair" elections require free access to information. The last two decades of elections show that political constraints and restricted access to information prevents an independent media in Sub-Sharan Africa. Read more

Just Faaland receives award for Outstanding Contribution to the People of Malaysia

Former director of CMI, Just Faaland, has received the Merdeka award. Faaland is awarded for his role in the formulation of the National Economic Policy (NEP). Read more

The Strange Alchemy of Life and Law

Detained in solitary confinement, tortured, exiled and eventually blown up by a car bomb. From an early age Albie Sachs played a prominent part in the struggle for justice in South Africa. Later in life he helped draft South Africa's post-apartheid Constitution, and served as a member of the Constitutional Court for fifteen years. Sachs talks to host Siri Gloppen about his life and role as a judge in the formative years of post-apartheid South Africa. Read more

Zimbabwe's Multilayered Crisis

Once a vibrant and dynamic society, Zimbabwe has since the turn of the millennium gone through a complex multilayered and pervasive series of catastrophes. Political instability, lawlessness, misgovernment and a relentless economic meltdown has transformed this leading southern African nation into an international pariah. Read more

Sub-Saharan Africa Southern and Central Asia Middle East Latin America