ISSN 0439-755X
CN 11-1911/B
主办:中国心理学会
   中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理学报 ›› 2023, Vol. 55 ›› Issue (10): 1677-1695.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1041.2023.01677

• 研究报告 • 上一篇    下一篇

授人以鱼还是授人以渔?高、低社会阶层的捐助行为差异

孙庆洲1(), 黄靖茹1, 虞晓芬1,2(), 高倾德1   

  1. 1浙江工业大学管理学院, 杭州 310023
    2浙江工业大学中国住房和房地产研究院, 杭州 310023
  • 收稿日期:2022-11-13 发布日期:2023-07-26 出版日期:2023-10-25
  • 通讯作者: 孙庆洲, E-mail: sunqingzhou2008@163.com; 虞晓芬, E-mail: yxf@zjut.edu.cn
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金(72271220);国家自然科学基金(71801193);国家自然科学基金(72271094);国家自然科学基金(71942004);浙江省自然科学基金(LY20C090011);浙江工业大学“青年英才支持计划”

Give a man a fish or teach him to fish? Differences in donor behavior between high and low social classes

SUN Qingzhou1(), HUANG Jingru1, YU Xiaofen1,2(), GAO Qingde1   

  1. 1School of Management, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou 310023, China
    2China Academy of Housing & Real Estate, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou 310023, China
  • Received:2022-11-13 Online:2023-07-26 Published:2023-10-25

摘要:

达则兼济天下, 穷则独善其身?以往研究给出了不同答案, 一个潜在原因是先前研究未能区分生存和发展两类捐助。本研究通过5项研究(N = 2512)对比了高、低社会阶层在生存类和发展类捐助上的偏好差异及其潜在机制, 发现在主观社会阶层上, 低阶层更偏好生存类捐助, 高阶层更偏好发展类捐助。导致该差异的原因是, 低阶层捐助时避免受助者更差, 高阶层捐助时希望受助者更好, 而非高、低阶层需求关注点的不同产生的需求迁移, 亦非高、低阶层长短视导向的不同产生的跨期偏好。在客观社会阶层上, 研究并未得到较为稳定的发现。这对于解析现有捐助理论的争议, 揭示不同阶层捐助的可变规律, 助推“共同富裕”实施中慈善事业的精准化管理有参考意义。

关键词: 社会阶层, 生存类捐助, 发展类捐助, 调节聚焦, 慈善助推

Abstract:

Who donates more generously between high and low social classes? Existing studies have provided different answers. One potential reason is that prior research fails to distinguish between categories of survival and developmental donation. We conducted five studies to examine the differences in donor behaviour between high and low social classes in terms of preference for survival or developmental categories of donation and the underlying mechanisms involved in this decision.

In Study 1, we manipulated participants’ relative sense of social class by comparing them with the highest or lowest class and measured their preference for survival and developmental donations. Results found that participants with a sense of high social class were more likely to choose developmental donations, whereas those with a sense of low social class were more likely to choose survival donations. In Study 2, we measured the participant’s’ true social class, their tendency to regulatory focus, and their preference between survival and development donations. Results found that those of high social class chose more developmental donations, whereas those of low social class chose more survival donations. Additionally, those of a higher social class had a higher promotion focus and lower prevention focus; thus, they preferred developmental donations, which supports the regulatory focus explanation. In Study 3, we adopted a between-subject design and measured participants’ true social class and their own survival or development demand, as well as their preference for survival or development donations. Results revealed that only the index of subjective social class and not objective social class showed a consistent tendency with Studies 1 and 2. The survival or development demand of high/low social class did not predict the participants’ own survival and development donations, which did not support the demand migration explanation. In Study 4, we set up survival and development items with prevention/promotion focus representation to separate the regulatory focus and demand migration explanations. We observed that subjective social classes’ choice preferences changed with representations of regulatory focus, rather than such individuals consistently choosing survival or developmental items owing to the migration of requirements. In Study 5, we set up different representations (regulatory focus × intertemporal orientation) of survival and developmental items to test whether participants’ preferences changed with representations of regulatory focus motivation or intertemporal orientation. The results showed that when developmental items were characterized as a long-term-promoted focus, high subjective social class individuals preferred developmental donations, whereas low subjective social class individuals preferred survival donations when survival items were characterized as a short-term-preventive focus. When developmental items were characterized as a long-term-preventive focus, low subjective social class individuals preferred developmental donations, whereas high social class individuals preferred survival donations when survival items were characterized as a short-term-promoted focus. These results suggest that subjective social classes’ preference for survival/developmental donation changes with the representation of regulatory focus motivation but is not consistent with the representation of intertemporal orientation; this supports the regulatory focus explanation and rejects the demand migration explanation and intertemporal preference explanation.

These findings provide new insights into donation contradictions, variable mechanisms for donation between high and low social classes, and the precise motivations for providing survival and developmental donations.

Key words: social class, survival donations, developmental donations, regulatory focus, charity nudge

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