Study finds high-status individuals are held to stricter ethical standards

New research provides evidence that high-status individuals are held to higher ethical standards compared to their less well-off counterparts. The findings shed light on how societal expectations shape our understanding of ethics and behavior among individuals with varying socioeconomic backgrounds. The research has been published in Scientific Reports.

Previous studies have hinted at the idea that individuals with greater wealth might be subject to heightened expectations regarding their ethical behavior. This concept, often referred to as “noblesse oblige,” suggests that those with more resources should demonstrate higher moral standards and generosity toward others. However, the extent to which this phenomenon exists and its variations across different cultural and socioeconomic contexts remained largely unexplored until now.

“There seems to be a gap between the perception of ‘the elites’ as very selfish and immoral, with little evidence support such views empirically,” said study author Stefan Trautmann, a professor at Heidelberg University in Germany.

“Obviously, negative examples by members of the elite stick out more saliently than misbehavior of the average person. This may bias the perception of what high status people actually do. At the same time, because of their larger resources, influence, and impact, we may hold especially high demands regarding the behavior of the elites. This is what we found in our survey experiments.”

The research comprised three distinct studies, each designed to explore different aspects of ethical expectations and wealth.

In the first study, 2,110 respondents from the United States participated through Amazon Mechanical Turk. An additional 923 respondents took part in a similar survey in China, administered by Shandong University. Participants read vignettes (brief stories) describing unethical behaviors committed by individuals with different socioeconomic statuses (high-SES or low-SES) and assessed these behaviors’ acceptability, perceived harm to society, and diagnosticity for unethical behavior in other contexts.

Across both the United States and China, respondents considered unethical behavior less acceptable, more harmful, and more indicative of unethical tendencies when committed by high-SES individuals compared to low-SES individuals. Interestingly, these effects were more pronounced among participants with lower socioeconomic status.

In Study 2, a total of 2,243 respondents from the United States participated through Amazon Mechanical Turk. Participants were presented with a scenario known as the “dictator game.” In this scenario, respondents were informed about both the allocator’s and the recipient’s annual income.

Participants were then asked to indicate the normative expectation of the appropriate amount of money the allocator should transfer to the recipient (between $0 and $100). This task aimed to measure the societal expectations of generosity based on the income of the allocator and the recipient.

Participants believed that allocators with lower incomes should give less, while those with higher incomes should give more, regardless of the recipient’s income. In line with Study 1, these effects were more pronounced among participants with lower socioeconomic status.

Study 3 involved 837 participants from the United States recruited via Amazon Mechanical Turk. The researchers delved deeper into the perception of generosity among millionaires, aiming to bridge the gap between what people expect from them and what they actually do. To do this, they used real data from an allocation game involving millionaires.

Participants were informed about the methodology of a recent study that examined the giving behavior of millionaires in allocation games. They were asked to assess whether millionaires gave (or should give) more or less than the “typical” giving of 28% of the available amount (€100).

The researchers found that the empirical expectations, or what people believed millionaires actually gave, were consistently lower than what they thought these wealthy individuals should give. This disconnect between what people believed millionaires should do and what they believed they actually did was particularly noticeable when the millionaires in the scenarios were interacting with individuals of lower income.

Many participants believed that the millionaires should give the full amount of money to the “poor partners.” But few participants believed that this is what the millionaires actually did. However, when the experiment was conducted, it was observed that almost half of the millionaires did, in fact, give the full amount of money to the “poor partners.” In short, people tended to underestimate the actual generosity of millionaires.

“The gap between what we perceive of as the behavior of members of the elites and what we think how they should behave leads to an almost automatic shortcoming on their side,” Trautmann told PsyPost. “We should be aware that elites are, as a whole, not more unethical or selfish than the average person.”

“For members of the elites, the results imply that noblesse oblige. They will be held to higher ethical standards, whether they like it or not. This will be an important message to convey to future elites, notably at institutions of higher education and professional training.”

While these studies provide valuable insights into the relationship between socioeconomic status and societal expectations, it’s important to acknowledge their limitations. For instance, the research relied on non-representative samples, such as respondents from the Amazon Mechanical Turk platform. Future research could aim to include more diverse and representative populations to validate these findings on a broader scale.

Additionally, the perceptions of how wealthy individuals attained their favorable positions in society may vary across countries and cultures, potentially influencing the observed effects. Further exploration of these nuances in different cultural contexts could shed more light on the dynamics of noblesse oblige.

The study, “High‑status individuals are held to higher ethical standards“, was authored by Stefan T. Trautmann, Xianghong Wang, Yijie Wang, and Yilong Xu.

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