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Social preferences and values: an experimental analysis for religiosity

In: Handbook of Empirical Research on Islam and Economic Life

Author

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  • Anwar Shah
  • Karim Khan
  • Hayat Khan

Abstract

The mainstream economic theory assumes that individuals’ preferences are exogenous and self-regarding. However, the laboratory experiments show that in most of the cases, individuals’ preferences exhibit regard for others. It is widely believed that values and norms can foster the other-regarding behaviour by constraining selfishness. This does not imply that selfish behaviour is dead as there is enough experimental evidence that other-regarding individuals use information asymmetry for their personal gains. In this study, while controlling for one aspect of values, that is, religion, we investigate whether individuals behave significantly differently when we control for their religiosity. We examine the behaviours of proposers in a modified ultimatum game after priming their religious identity. Using hadith, saying of the Holy Prophet Muhammad Peace Be Upon Him (PBUH), as a priming instrument, we find that most of the proposers make equitable offers to the responders as compared to the controlled treatment. This is in spite of the fact that the proposers could use information asymmetry regarding the size of the pie for maximizing their private gains. The study suggests that promoting universal values can be beneficial for the promotion of pro-social or other-regarding behaviour.

Suggested Citation

  • Anwar Shah & Karim Khan & Hayat Khan, 2017. "Social preferences and values: an experimental analysis for religiosity," Chapters, in: M. Kabir Hassan (ed.), Handbook of Empirical Research on Islam and Economic Life, chapter 1, pages 23-46, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:16049_1
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    Keywords

    Asian Studies; Economics and Finance;

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