Striving for balance in economics: Towards a theory of the social determination of behavior

被引:111
|
作者
Hoff, Karla [1 ]
Stiglitz, Joseph E. [2 ]
机构
[1] World Bank, Washington, DC 20005 USA
[2] Columbia Univ, New York, NY 10027 USA
关键词
Behavioral economics; Culture; Framing; Gender; Role model; Sociology; CULTURE; MEDIA; POWER; PREFERENCES; UNCERTAINTY; PERFORMANCE; INCENTIVES; PSYCHOLOGY; JUDGMENT; IDENTITY;
D O I
10.1016/j.jebo.2016.01.005
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
This paper is an attempt to broaden economic discourse by importing insights into human behavior not just from psychology, but also from sociology and anthropology. Whereas in standard economics the concept of the decision-maker is the rational actor, and in early work in behavioral economics it is the quasi-rational actor influenced by the context of the moment of decision, in some recent work in behavioral economics, the decision-maker could be called the enculturated actor. This actor's preferences, perception, and cognition are subject to two deep social influences: (a) the social contexts to which he has become exposed and, especially, accustomed; and (b) the cultural mental models including categories, identities, narratives, and woridviews that he uses to process information. The paper traces how these factors shape behavior through the endogenous determination of preferences and the lenses through which individuals see the world their perception and interpretation of situations. The paper offers a tentative taxonomy of the social determinants of behavior and describes the results of controlled and natural experiments that only a broader view of these determinants can plausibly explain. The perspective suggests more realistic models of human behavior for explaining outcomes and designing policies. (C) 2016 Published by Elsevier B.V.
引用
收藏
页码:25 / 57
页数:33
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The Social Economics of Adolescent Behavior and Measuring the Behavioral Culture of Schools
    Mitchell D. Wong
    Paul J. Chung
    Ron D. Hays
    David P. Kennedy
    Joan S. Tucker
    Rebecca N. Dudovitz
    Journal of Child and Family Studies, 2019, 28 : 928 - 940
  • [22] The social alignment theory of power: Predicting associative and dissociative behavior in hierarchies
    Fast, Nathanael J.
    Overbeck, Jennifer R.
    RESEARCH IN ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR, 2022, 42
  • [23] ATTITUDES OF MASTER STUDENTS WORKING IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR TOWARDS MANAGEMENT EDUCATION. DOES ECONOMICS? THEORY MATTER?
    Opstad, Leiv
    MANAGEMENT RESEARCH AND PRACTICE, 2022, 14 (04): : 37 - 46
  • [24] Applying Self-Determination Theory towards Motivating Young Women in Computer Science
    Mishkin, Allison
    SIGCSE '19: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 50TH ACM TECHNICAL SYMPOSIUM ON COMPUTER SCIENCE EDUCATION, 2019, : 1025 - 1031
  • [25] Corporate Social Responsibility and Women's Entrepreneurship: Towards a More Adequate Theory of "Work"
    Johnstone-Louis, Mary
    BUSINESS ETHICS QUARTERLY, 2017, 27 (04) : 569 - 602
  • [26] Tempering the not-yet: Towards a social theory for the Anthropocene
    Adam, Barbara
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL THEORY, 2024, 27 (02) : 191 - 208
  • [27] Predicting Breastfeeding Intentions: A Test and Extension of the Theory of Normative Social Behavior with African American Social Identity
    Villalobos, Aubrey Van Kirk
    Turner, Monique Mitchell
    Lapinski, Maria Knight
    Hull, Shawnika
    Long, Sahira
    Wang, Jichuan
    Moore, E. Whitney G.
    HEALTH COMMUNICATION, 2023, 38 (01) : 101 - 113
  • [28] Towards a revised theory of collective learning processes: Argumentation, narrative and the making of the social bond
    Forchtner, Bernhard
    Jorge, Marcos Engelken
    Eder, Klaus
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL THEORY, 2020, 23 (02) : 200 - 218
  • [29] Towards a unified theory of toxic behavior in video games
    Kordyaka, Bastian
    Jahn, Katharina
    Niehaves, Bjoern
    INTERNET RESEARCH, 2020, 30 (04) : 1081 - 1102
  • [30] Examining students' behavior towards campus security preparedness exercise: The role of perceived risk within the theory of planned behavior
    Tan, Kim-Lim
    Sia, Joseph Kee-Ming
    Tang, Kuok Ho Daniel
    CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY, 2022, 41 (07) : 4358 - 4367