Religion, minority status, and trust: Evidence from a field experiment
通过在孟加拉国和印度的实地实验,研究宗教和相对地位如何影响信任与可信赖行为,发现少数群体地位(无论宗教)导致内群体信任偏好,而多数群体地位则导致外群体可信赖偏好。
This paper reports the results from a lab-in-the-field experiment conducted in Bangladesh and India that examines the influence of religion and relative status on trust and trustworthiness. We find that in both locations individuals with minority status, irrespective of their religion, exhibit positive in-group bias in trust, while individuals with majority status show positive out-group bias in trustworthiness. This suggests that behavior is not driven by religious identity per se but is highly influenced by the relative status it generates within the population. Within both groups, heterogeneity with respect to how strongly individuals associate with the group identity affects behavior.