"Last year Karla Hoff, an economist at the World Bank who is currently working at Princeton University, and her colleagues reported the results of experiments conducted in villages in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh (American Economic Review, vol 98, p 494). In these tests, two players started out with 50 rupees each. The first could choose to give his to the second, in which case the experimenters added a further 100 rupees, giving the second player 200 rupees in total. The second player could decide to keep the money for himself, or share it equally with the first player. A third player then entered the game, who could punish the second player - for each 2 rupees he was willing to spend, the second player was docked 10 rupees.
The results were startling. Even when the second player shared the money fairly, two-thirds of the time the newcomer decided to punish him anyway - a spiteful act with seemingly no altruistic payoff. "We asked one guy why," says Hoff. "He said he thought it was fun."
Hoff found that high-caste players were more likely to punish their fellow gamers spitefully than low-caste players, leading her to suggest that context is everything. It is not that people in Uttar Pradesh are nastier than elsewhere, but rather that the structure of their society makes them acutely conscious of status."
From a fascinating article that tries to answer the following:
But why do we inflict pain for no gain? On the face of it, it is rather a perverse way of going about things. Does spitefulness stem from an affronted sense of fairness? Or something altogether darker: envy, lust for revenge - or perhaps even pure sadism?
Do go read the whole thing.
You might like "Games Indians Play" written by V Raghunathan.ie, If you haven't read it already...
ReplyDeleteI enjoy what you write. Keep posting:)
There was an earlier study by Hoff and Pandey on caste which is also interesting:
ReplyDeletehttp://sticerd.lse.ac.uk/dps/bpde2004/hoff.pdf
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I tend not to believe the whole thing Hoff states Annie, like she says here - But higher castes can also put others down, safe in the knowledge that "untouchables" are unlikely to strike back. "If you're low caste it's dangerous to rise in status," says Hoff. "You'll get beaten up or worse." - Actually, the "untouchable" as Hoff defines, would not be seen playing with the so called "higher castes" as there are clear demarcations that separate the two and one would not be seen with the other as such. On what basis then, does Hoff conclude her findings?
ReplyDeleteI am only trying to say, the social fabric and divides in India, are far more complex than a UP based play of moneys