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Empathic Responsiveness: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment on Giving to Welfare Recipients

Abstract

This paper reports a surprising finding from an experiment on giving to welfare recipients. The experiment tests how offers of money in n-donor dictator games are affected by 1) donors' humanitarian and egalitarian values and 2) direct information about the recipients' work-preferences. People who are self-reported humanitarians and egalitarians have giving that is highly elastic with respect to the apparent worthiness of the recipient. Among high scoring humanitarian-egalitarians, the median offer to a recipient who appeared industrious was 5.00,whilethemedianoffertoarecipientwhoappearedlazywasonly5.00, while the median offer to a recipient who appeared lazy was only 1.00. Among low scoring humanitarian-egalitarians, the median offer was $1.00 in both conditions. I refer to this combination of altruism and equity/reciprocity as empathic responsiveness. This finding can be rationalized by a model of inequity aversion.Fairness, Social Preferences, Redistributive Politics, Empathy, Equity, Attitudinal Measures, Dictator Games, Public Goods Experiments

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