The flexible fairness: equality, earned entitlement, and self-interest

The current study explored whether earned entitlement modulated the perception of fairness in three experiments. A preliminary resource earning task was added before players decided how to allocate the resource they jointly earned. Participants' decision in allocation, their responses to equal...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2013-09, Vol.8 (9), p.e73106-e73106
Hauptverfasser: Feng, Chunliang, Luo, Yi, Gu, Ruolei, Broster, Lucas S, Shen, Xueyi, Tian, Tengxiang, Luo, Yue-Jia, Krueger, Frank
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container_end_page e73106
container_issue 9
container_start_page e73106
container_title PloS one
container_volume 8
creator Feng, Chunliang
Luo, Yi
Gu, Ruolei
Broster, Lucas S
Shen, Xueyi
Tian, Tengxiang
Luo, Yue-Jia
Krueger, Frank
description The current study explored whether earned entitlement modulated the perception of fairness in three experiments. A preliminary resource earning task was added before players decided how to allocate the resource they jointly earned. Participants' decision in allocation, their responses to equal or unequal offers, whether advantageous or disadvantageous, and subjective ratings of fairness were all assessed in the current study. Behavioral results revealed that participants proposed more generous offers and showed enhanced tolerance to disadvantageous unequal offers from others when they performed worse than their presumed "partners," while the reverse was true in the better-performance condition. The subjective ratings also indicated the effect of earned entitlement, such that worse performance was associated with higher perceived feelings of fairness for disadvantageous unequal offers, while better performance was associated with higher feelings of fairness for advantageous unequal offers. Equal offers were considered "fair" only when earned entitlement was even between two parties. In sum, the perception of fairness is modulated by an integration of egalitarian motivation and entitlement. In addition to justice principles, participants were also motivated by self-interest, such that participants placed more weight on entitlement in the better-performance condition than in the worse-performance condition. These results imply that earned entitlement is evaluated in a self-serving way.
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0073106
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Analysis of Variance
Behavior
Behavioral sciences
Decision Making
Dictators
Distributive justice
Egalitarianism
Equality
Experiments
Female
Games
Games, Experimental
Humans
Laboratories
Male
Motivation
Neurosciences
Perception
Preferences
Principles
Ratings
Self interest
Studies
Task Performance and Analysis
Windfall profits
Young Adult
title The flexible fairness: equality, earned entitlement, and self-interest
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