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The role of character strengths in economic decision-making

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2023

Matthew R. Jordan*
Affiliation:
Yale University Department of Psychology, 2 Hillhouse Ave, New Haven, CT, 06511
David G. Rand
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, Department of Economics, and School of Management, Yale University
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Abstract

We aggregated data from 28 studies (total N=13,386) to assess the relationship between individual differences in character strengths, as described by the VIA model of character, and economically-relevant behaviors and cognition. Factor analyzing the character strength inventory responses revealed four factors – Caring, Leadership, Inquisitiveness, and Self-control – each of which correlated with a variety of measures. Caring was associated with the willingness to pay costs to benefit others, as well as reliance on intuitive decision-making; Leadership was associated with inefficient, anti-social behaviors, risk taking, and trusting one’s intuitions while also liking to reason; Inquisitiveness was associated with efficient behaviors in both the social and risk domains, and reliance on deliberative decision-making; and Self-control was associated with delaying gratification, risk aversion, and a reliance on reason. These results help shed light on the relationship between character – and personality more generally – and economic behaviors. In doing so, we give some indication of which types of people will be most successful in which decision-making contexts.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - 3.0
The authors license this article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors [2018] This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Figure 0

Table 1: Character strength items and descriptions.

Figure 1

Table 2: Iterated principal factor analysis revealed a four-factor structure, shown here. Only Hope, Judgment/Critical thinking, and Perseverance loaded significantly on more than one factor. Spirituality/Religiousness was the only item that did not load on one of the four factors. Only items with loadings > 0.4 on a given factor are shown.

Figure 2

Table 3: Shown here are the relationships between the four character strength dimensions and a variety of demographic questions. Study-level fixed effects are included but not shown in the regression table.

Figure 3

Table 4: Prosociality decisions as predicted by the four dimensions. Shown above are regression results predicting pure prosociality, coordination, and anti-coordination using the four character strength dimensions. For each dimension, we present standardized beta coefficients in the first row and t-statistics in parentheses below. Study-level fixed effects are included, but not shown, in each model.

Figure 4

Table 5: Punishment behavior as predicted by the four dimensions. Shown are regression results predicting second party punishment (2PP), third party punishment of those who had acted fairly (3PP fair other), and third party punishment of those who had acted selfishly (3PP selfish other) using the four character strength dimensions. For each dimension, we present standardized beta coefficients in the first row and t-statistics in parentheses below. All models include study fixed effects.

Figure 5

Table 6: Risk and time preferences as predicted by the four dimensions. Shown are regression results predicting self-reported risk-taking, equal expected payoff incentivized risky choice, positive expected payoff incentivized risky choice, and logged discount rates using the four character strength dimensions. For each dimension, we present standardized beta coefficients in the first row and t-statistics in parentheses below. All models include study fixed effects.

Figure 6

Table 7: Cognitive style measures as predicted by the four dimensions. Shown are regression results predicting faith in intuition, need for cognition, and accuracy assessment of intuition versus reason using the four character strength dimensions. For each dimension, we present standardized beta coefficients in the first row and t-statistics in parentheses below. All models include study fixed effects.

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