Literature DB >> 36137160

Sure-thing vs. probabilistic charitable giving: Experimental evidence on the role of individual differences in risky and ambiguous charitable decision-making.

Philipp Schoenegger1, Miguel Costa-Gomes2.   

Abstract

Charities differ, among other things, alongside the likelihood that their interventions succeed and produce the desired outcomes and alongside the extent that such likelihood can even be articulated numerically. In this paper, we investigate what best explains charitable giving behaviour regarding charities that have interventions that will succeed with a quantifiable and high probability (sure-thing charities) and charities that have interventions that only have a small and hard to quantify probability of bringing about the desired end (probabilistic charities). We study individual differences in risk/ambiguity attitudes, empathy, numeracy, optimism, and donor type (warm glow vs. pure altruistic donor type) as potential predictors of this choice. We conduct a money incentivised, pre-registered experiment on Prolific on a representative UK sample (n = 1,506) to investigate participant choices (i) between these two types of charities and (ii) about one randomly selected charity. Overall, we find little to no evidence that individual differences predict choices regarding decisions about sure-thing and probabilistic charities, with the exception that a purely altruistic donor type predicts donations to probabilistic charities when participants were presented with a randomly selected charity in (ii). Conducting exploratory equivalence tests, we find that the data provide robust evidence in favour of the absence of an effect (or a negligibly small effect) where we fail to reject the null. This is corroborated by exploratory Bayesian analyses. We take this paper to be contributing to the literature on charitable giving via this comprehensive null-result in pursuit of contributing to a cumulative science.

Entities:  

Year:  2022        PMID: 36137160      PMCID: PMC9499298          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0273971

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.752


  14 in total

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Authors:  Arnaud Carré; Nicolas Stefaniak; Fanny D'Ambrosio; Leïla Bensalah; Chrystel Besche-Richard
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Journal:  J Pers Soc Psychol       Date:  1994-12

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Journal:  J Health Soc Behav       Date:  1984-09

6.  Robust Bayesian meta-analysis: Addressing publication bias with model-averaging.

Authors:  Maximilian Maier; František Bartoš; Eric-Jan Wagenmakers
Journal:  Psychol Methods       Date:  2022-05-19

7.  Uncertainty about the impact of social decisions increases prosocial behaviour.

Authors:  Andreas Kappes; Anne-Marie Nussberger; Nadira S Faber; Guy Kahane; Julian Savulescu; Molly J Crockett
Journal:  Nat Hum Behav       Date:  2018-07-09

8.  Risk preference shares the psychometric structure of major psychological traits.

Authors:  Renato Frey; Andreas Pedroni; Rui Mata; Jörg Rieskamp; Ralph Hertwig
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2017-10-04       Impact factor: 14.136

9.  Tolerance to ambiguous uncertainty predicts prosocial behavior.

Authors:  Marc-Lluís Vives; Oriel FeldmanHall
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2018-06-12       Impact factor: 14.919

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