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Economic Inequality and Prosocial Behavior: A Multidimensional Analysis

Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Rising economic inequality has become a widespread trend and concern in recent
decades. Economic inequality is often associated with pernicious consequences such as a
decrease in individual health and social cohesion and an increase in political conflicts.
Does economic inequality have a negative association with prosocial behavior, like many
other aspects of inequality? To answer this question, this dissertation investigates the
relationship between economic inequality and prosocial behavior, particularly charitable
giving, by conducting three empirical studies.
The first study is a meta-analysis on the overall relationship between economic
inequality and prosocial behavior. Results from 192 effect sizes in 100 studies show that
there is a general small, negative relationship between economic inequality and different
forms of prosocial behavior. Moderator tests demonstrate that social context, the
operationalization of prosocial behavior, the operationalization of economic inequality,
and average age of participants significantly moderate the relationship between economic
inequality and prosocial behavior.
The second study differentiates between redistributive and non-redistributive
charitable causes and examines how income inequality is associated with charitable
giving to these two causes in China. Using synthesized data from the China Labor-force
Dynamics Survey (CLDS) and official data, this study shows that income inequality has
no significant relationship with charitable giving to redistributive causes, but it has a
negative association with charitable giving to non-redistributive causes. Of the four moderators, only education significantly moderates the relationship between income
inequality and redistributive giving.
The third study tests whether and how government social spending mediates the
relationship between income inequality and charitable giving. Using the US county level
panel data, this study finds there is no significant relationship between income inequality
and government social spending as well as between government social spending and
charitable giving. Thus, government social spending does not significantly mediate the
relationship between income inequality and charitable giving. However, income
inequality has a robustly and significantly negative relationship with charitable giving.
In sum, this dissertation furthers our understanding of the relationship between
economic inequality and prosocial behavior, especially charitable giving. Given the
higher economic inequality facing many countries, it is a timely dissertation and has
important practical implications.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:IUPUI/oai:scholarworks.iupui.edu:1805/29513
Date06 1900
CreatorsYang, Yongzheng
ContributorsWiepking, Pamala, Badertscher, Katherine, Konrath, Sara, Ottoni-Wilhelm, Mark, Rooney, Patrick
Source SetsIndiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeDissertation

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