When and Why People Evaluate Negative Reciprocity as More Fair Than Positive Reciprocity

If you are kind to me, I am likely to reciprocate and doing so feels fair. Many theories of social exchange assume that such reciprocity and fairness are well aligned with one another. We argue that this correspondence between reciprocity and fairness is restricted to interpersonal dyads and does not govern more complex multilateral interactions. When multiple people are involved, reciprocity leads to partiality, which may be seen as unfair by outsiders. We report seven studies, conducted with people from the United States, in which participants were asked to evaluate situations involving resource distribution in contexts such as economic games, government, and the workplace. Specifically, we find that equal resource distribution in multilateral interactions is seen as more fair than engaging in reciprocity. We also find that negative reciprocity is seen as more fair than positive reciprocity in these multilateral situations because positive reciprocity is perceived as based in favoritism. We rule out alternative explanations and demonstrate that there are contexts where favoritism is not viewed as unfair. These findings are important for theories of fairness and reciprocity as they demonstrate the central role of perceived partiality in the evaluation of multi-party resource allocation.

[1]  G. Snyder The Security Dilemma in Alliance Politics , 1984, World Politics.

[2]  H P RECKORT,et al.  [SOCIAL JUSTICE]. , 1965, Zahnarztliche Mitteilungen.

[3]  M. Deutsch Equity, Equality, and Need: What Determines Which Value Will Be Used as the Basis of Distributive Justice? , 1975 .

[4]  A. Fiske The four elementary forms of sociality: framework for a unified theory of social relations. , 1992, Psychological review.

[5]  Gilbert Roberts,et al.  Evolution of direct and indirect reciprocity , 2008, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[6]  Jamie S Hughes In a moral dilemma, choose the one you love: Impartial actors are seen as less moral than partial ones , 2017, The British journal of social psychology.

[7]  Toshio Yamagishi,et al.  In-group bias and culture of collectivism* , 1998 .

[8]  Pat Barclay,et al.  Cooperation in social dilemmas: free riding may be thwarted by second-order reward rather than by punishment. , 2008, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[9]  E. Caruso,et al.  Waste management: how reducing partiality can promote efficient resource allocation. , 2015, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[10]  Huseyin Arasli,et al.  NEPOTISM, FAVORITISM AND CRONYISM: A STUDY OF THEIR EFFECTS ON JOB STRESS AND JOB SATISFACTION IN THE BANKING INDUSTRY OF NORTH CYPRUS , 2008 .

[11]  A. Shaw Fairness: What It Isn’t, What It Is, and What It Might Be For , 2016 .

[12]  M. Gurven Reciprocal altruism and food sharing decisions among Hiwi and Ache hunter–gatherers , 2004, Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology.

[13]  Max M. Krasnow,et al.  Evolution of direct reciprocity under uncertainty can explain human generosity in one-shot encounters , 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[14]  E. Caruso,et al.  Being biased against friends to appear unbiased , 2018, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology.

[15]  M. Gurven,et al.  Collective Action in Action: Prosocial Behavior in and out of the Laboratory , 2008 .

[16]  R. Tunney,et al.  Gratefully Received, Gratefully Repaid: The Role of Perceived Fairness in Cooperative Interactions , 2014, PloS one.

[17]  Jon Elster,et al.  Fairness and Norms , 2014 .

[18]  Alicia A. Grandey,et al.  The relationship of organizational politics and support to work behaviors, attitudes, and stress , 1997 .

[19]  Boaz Keysar,et al.  Reciprocity Is Not Give and Take Asymmetric Reciprocity to Positive and Negative Acts , 2008 .

[20]  A. Shaw,et al.  Fairness as partiality aversion: the development of procedural justice. , 2014, Journal of experimental child psychology.

[21]  A. Shaw,et al.  Children discard a resource to avoid inequity. , 2012, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[22]  Peter DeScioli,et al.  The Alliance Hypothesis for Human Friendship , 2009, PloS one.

[23]  E. Fehr A Theory of Fairness, Competition and Cooperation , 1998 .

[24]  L. Festinger A Theory of Social Comparison Processes , 1954 .

[25]  E. Halperin,et al.  Support for redistribution is shaped by compassion, envy, and self-interest, but not a taste for fairness , 2017, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[26]  D. Schroeder,et al.  Justice Within Social Dilemmas , 2003, Personality and social psychology review : an official journal of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Inc.

[27]  E. Caruso,et al.  Disadvantaged But Not Dissatisfied: How Agency Ameliorates Negative Reactions to Unequal Pay , 2018, Journal of experimental psychology. Applied.

[28]  J. Thibaut,et al.  Procedural Justice: A Psychological Analysis , 1976 .

[29]  J. S. Adams,et al.  Inequity In Social Exchange , 1965 .

[30]  L. Young,et al.  The whistleblower's dilemma and the fairness–loyalty tradeoff , 2013 .

[31]  J. Andreoni Cooperation in Public-Goods Experiments: Kindness or Confusion? , 1995 .

[32]  J. Haidt,et al.  The moral mind: How five sets of innate intuitions guide the development of many culture-specific virtues, and perhaps even modules. , 2008 .

[33]  J. Krueger The Company You Keep: Friendship Decisions From a Functional Perspective , 2012 .

[34]  J. Poon,et al.  Effects of performance appraisal politics on job satisfaction and turnover intention , 2004 .

[35]  Alex Shaw,et al.  Equity or equality? Moral judgments follow the money , 2014, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

[36]  W DreudeC.K.,et al.  Do-no-harm in coalition formation: why losses inhibit exclusion and promote fairness cognitions , 2005 .

[37]  Jonathan Robinson,et al.  TurkPrime.com: A versatile crowdsourcing data acquisition platform for the behavioral sciences , 2016, Behavior Research Methods.

[38]  Eric W. K. Tsang,et al.  Antecedents and Consequences of Cronyism in Organizations , 2003 .

[39]  Matthew S. Fritz,et al.  Mediation analysis. , 2019, Annual review of psychology.

[40]  J. Henrich,et al.  Markets, Religion, Community Size, and the Evolution of Fairness and Punishment , 2010, Science.

[41]  Ken Binmore,et al.  Why do people cooperate? , 2006 .

[42]  Not all mutualism is fair, and not all fairness is mutualistic. , 2013, The Behavioral and brain sciences.

[43]  R. Kurzban,et al.  A Solution to the Mysteries of Morality , 2016, Psychological bulletin.

[44]  Bernd Irlenbusch,et al.  Editorial Addresses , 1999 .

[45]  A. Shaw,et al.  Friends without benefits: When we react negatively to helpful and generous friends , 2018, Evolution and Human Behavior.

[46]  Christopher K. Hsee Elastic Justification: How Unjustifiable Factors Influence Judgments , 1996 .

[47]  Adrian F. Ward,et al.  Paying it forward: generalized reciprocity and the limits of generosity. , 2014, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[48]  J. Reinsch,et al.  Do Communication Abilities Affect Promotion Decisions? Some Data From the C-Suite , 2014 .

[49]  A. Shaw,et al.  It’s not fair: Folk intuitions about disadvantageous and advantageous inequity aversion , 2017, Judgment and Decision Making.

[50]  L. Young,et al.  Who Sees What as Fair? Mapping Individual Differences in Valuation of Reciprocity, Charity, and Impartiality , 2017 .

[51]  Francesca Gino,et al.  Self-Serving Justifications , 2015 .

[52]  William Damon,et al.  The social world of the child , 1977 .

[53]  David M. Messick,et al.  Equality, fairness, and social conflict , 1995 .

[54]  Yen-Sheng Chiang,et al.  Self-interested partner selection can lead to the emergence of fairness , 2010 .

[55]  L. Young,et al.  Corruption in the Context of Moral Trade-offs , 2014 .

[56]  Shaul Shalvi,et al.  The collaborative roots of corruption , 2015, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[57]  Yoella Bereby-Meyer,et al.  Not Taking Responsibility: Equity Trumps Efficiency in Allocation Decisions , 2017, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[58]  Joshua B. Tenenbaum,et al.  Constructing Social Preferences From Anticipated Judgments: When Impartial Inequity is Fair and Why? , 2017, CogSci.

[59]  J. Keith Murnighan,et al.  Models of coalition behavior: Game theoretic, social psychological, and political perspectives. , 1978 .

[60]  K. Hawkes,et al.  On Why Male Foragers Hunt and Share Food , 1993, Current Anthropology.

[61]  Keith P. Sentis,et al.  Fairness and preference , 1979 .

[62]  James H. Fowler,et al.  Egalitarian motives in humans , 2007, Nature.

[63]  R. Kurzban,et al.  Mysteries of morality , 2009, Cognition.

[64]  Ivan E. Brick,et al.  CEO Compensation, Director Compensation, and Firm Performance: Evidence of Cronyism , 2002 .

[65]  Tom R. Tyler,et al.  Social Justice: Outcome and Procedure , 2000 .

[66]  E. Fehr,et al.  Fairness and Retaliation: The Economics of Reciprocity , 2000, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[67]  Armin Falk,et al.  A Theory of Reciprocity , 2001, Games Econ. Behav..

[68]  D. Sperber,et al.  A mutualistic approach to morality: the evolution of fairness by partner choice. , 2013, The Behavioral and brain sciences.

[69]  Abigail Barr,et al.  The effects of externalities and framing on bribery in a petty corruption experiment , 2009 .

[70]  Henk Wilke,et al.  The Excluded Player in Coalition Formation , 2003, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[71]  Laura Niemi,et al.  The behavioral and neural signatures of distinct conceptions of fairness , 2018, Social neuroscience.

[72]  Peter DeScioli,et al.  Fairness versus favoritism in children , 2012 .

[73]  R. Kurzban,et al.  Whoever is not with me is against me: The costs of neutrality among friends , 2017 .

[74]  Michael Gurven,et al.  The Evolution of Contingent Cooperation , 2006, Current Anthropology.

[75]  J. G. Miller,et al.  Culture and Moral Judgment: How Are Conflicts between Justice and Interpersonal Responsibilities Resolved? , 2022 .

[76]  T. Cook,et al.  Equity theory and the cognitive ability of children. , 1979 .

[77]  A. Shaw Beyond “to Share or Not to Share” , 2013 .

[78]  Kevin M. Carlsmith The roles of retribution and utility in determining punishment , 2006 .

[79]  Z. Kunda,et al.  The case for motivated reasoning. , 1990, Psychological bulletin.

[80]  M. Crockett,et al.  The costs of being consequentialist: Social inference from instrumental harm and impartial beneficence , 2018, Journal of experimental social psychology.

[81]  Ernst Fehr,et al.  Testing Theories of Fairness - Intentions Matter , 2000, Games Econ. Behav..

[82]  December,et al.  The moral mind : How five sets of innate intuitions guide the development of many culture-specific virtues , and perhaps even modules , 2007 .

[83]  T. Offerman Hurting hurts more than helping helps , 2002 .

[84]  M. Rabin,et al.  Understanding Social Preference with Simple Tests , 2001 .