Reciprocity or Community? Different Cultural Pathways to Cooperation and Welfare

We compare efficiency-enhancing cooperation and its underlying motives in Iceland and the US. The two countries are distinct along all measures of national culture known to us. They are however both developed democracies with similar GDP/capita (PPP adjusted). These similarities make it possible to...

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Published in:Cross-Cultural Research
Main Authors: Gunnthorsdottir, Anna, Thorsteinsson, Palmar, Olafsson, Sigurdur P.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: USA 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/94917
http://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-94917-0
https://doi.org/10.1177/10693971231166165
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author Gunnthorsdottir, Anna
Thorsteinsson, Palmar
Olafsson, Sigurdur P.
author_facet Gunnthorsdottir, Anna
Thorsteinsson, Palmar
Olafsson, Sigurdur P.
author_sort Gunnthorsdottir, Anna
collection SSOAR - Social Science Open Access Repository
container_issue 4
container_start_page 391
container_title Cross-Cultural Research
container_volume 57
description We compare efficiency-enhancing cooperation and its underlying motives in Iceland and the US. The two countries are distinct along all measures of national culture known to us. They are however both developed democracies with similar GDP/capita (PPP adjusted). These similarities make it possible to hold constant aspects of culture related to wealth and institutions. In an experimental Voluntary Contribution Mechanism (VCM), we prime the participants with different social foci, emphasizing either their directly cooperating team or their wider social unit. With a team focus, cooperation levels do not differ between the two cultures, but this superficial similarity masks deep-seated differences: When the focus is on the wider social unit cooperation increases in Iceland and declines in the US. Both when the contribution levels are the same and when they differ, members of the two cultures differ in their motives to cooperate: Icelanders tend to cooperate unconditionally, and US subjects conditionally with a strong emphasis on reciprocity. Our findings indicate that different cultures can achieve similar economic and societal performance through different cultural norms and suggest that cooperation should be encouraged through culturally tailored persuasion tactics.
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spelling ftssoar:oai:gesis.izsoz.de:document/94917 2025-04-27T14:31:23+00:00 Reciprocity or Community? Different Cultural Pathways to Cooperation and Welfare Gunnthorsdottir, Anna Thorsteinsson, Palmar Olafsson, Sigurdur P. 2024-07-05T07:32:46Z https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/94917 http://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-94917-0 https://doi.org/10.1177/10693971231166165 unknown USA https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/94917 https://doi.org/10.1177/10693971231166165 Creative Commons - Namensnennung, Nicht-kommerz. 4.0 Creative Commons - Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 Cross-Cultural Research 57 4 391-428 Soziologie Anthropologie Sociology & anthropology national culture framing voluntary contribution mechanism European Values Study 2008: Integrated Dataset (ZA4800) Kultursoziologie Kunstsoziologie Literatursoziologie Cultural Sociology Sociology of Art Sociology of Literature USA Island Kooperationsbereitschaft kulturelle Faktoren Motivation Reziprozität Gemeinschaft EVS Experiment United States of America Iceland willingness to cooperate cultural factors reciprocity community Zeitschriftenartikel journal article 2024 ftssoar https://doi.org/10.1177/10693971231166165 2025-03-31T04:26:01Z We compare efficiency-enhancing cooperation and its underlying motives in Iceland and the US. The two countries are distinct along all measures of national culture known to us. They are however both developed democracies with similar GDP/capita (PPP adjusted). These similarities make it possible to hold constant aspects of culture related to wealth and institutions. In an experimental Voluntary Contribution Mechanism (VCM), we prime the participants with different social foci, emphasizing either their directly cooperating team or their wider social unit. With a team focus, cooperation levels do not differ between the two cultures, but this superficial similarity masks deep-seated differences: When the focus is on the wider social unit cooperation increases in Iceland and declines in the US. Both when the contribution levels are the same and when they differ, members of the two cultures differ in their motives to cooperate: Icelanders tend to cooperate unconditionally, and US subjects conditionally with a strong emphasis on reciprocity. Our findings indicate that different cultures can achieve similar economic and societal performance through different cultural norms and suggest that cooperation should be encouraged through culturally tailored persuasion tactics. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland SSOAR - Social Science Open Access Repository Cross-Cultural Research 57 4 391 428
spellingShingle Soziologie
Anthropologie
Sociology & anthropology
national culture
framing
voluntary contribution mechanism
European Values Study 2008: Integrated Dataset (ZA4800)
Kultursoziologie
Kunstsoziologie
Literatursoziologie
Cultural Sociology
Sociology of Art
Sociology of Literature
USA
Island
Kooperationsbereitschaft
kulturelle Faktoren
Motivation
Reziprozität
Gemeinschaft
EVS
Experiment
United States of America
Iceland
willingness to cooperate
cultural factors
reciprocity
community
Gunnthorsdottir, Anna
Thorsteinsson, Palmar
Olafsson, Sigurdur P.
Reciprocity or Community? Different Cultural Pathways to Cooperation and Welfare
title Reciprocity or Community? Different Cultural Pathways to Cooperation and Welfare
title_full Reciprocity or Community? Different Cultural Pathways to Cooperation and Welfare
title_fullStr Reciprocity or Community? Different Cultural Pathways to Cooperation and Welfare
title_full_unstemmed Reciprocity or Community? Different Cultural Pathways to Cooperation and Welfare
title_short Reciprocity or Community? Different Cultural Pathways to Cooperation and Welfare
title_sort reciprocity or community? different cultural pathways to cooperation and welfare
topic Soziologie
Anthropologie
Sociology & anthropology
national culture
framing
voluntary contribution mechanism
European Values Study 2008: Integrated Dataset (ZA4800)
Kultursoziologie
Kunstsoziologie
Literatursoziologie
Cultural Sociology
Sociology of Art
Sociology of Literature
USA
Island
Kooperationsbereitschaft
kulturelle Faktoren
Motivation
Reziprozität
Gemeinschaft
EVS
Experiment
United States of America
Iceland
willingness to cooperate
cultural factors
reciprocity
community
topic_facet Soziologie
Anthropologie
Sociology & anthropology
national culture
framing
voluntary contribution mechanism
European Values Study 2008: Integrated Dataset (ZA4800)
Kultursoziologie
Kunstsoziologie
Literatursoziologie
Cultural Sociology
Sociology of Art
Sociology of Literature
USA
Island
Kooperationsbereitschaft
kulturelle Faktoren
Motivation
Reziprozität
Gemeinschaft
EVS
Experiment
United States of America
Iceland
willingness to cooperate
cultural factors
reciprocity
community
url https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/94917
http://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-94917-0
https://doi.org/10.1177/10693971231166165