Article

Altruism in governance: Insights from randomized training for Pakistan's junior ministers

Sultan Mehmood, Shaheen Naseer et Daniel L. Chen

Résumé

Randomizing different schools of thought in training altruism finds that training junior deputy ministers in the utility of empathy renders at least a 0.4 standard deviation increase in altruism. Treated ministers increased their perspective-taking: blood donations doubled, but only when blood banks requested their exact blood type. Perspective-taking in strategic dilemmas improved. Field measures such as orphanage visits and volunteering in impoverished schools also increased, as did their test scores in teamwork assessments in policy scenarios. Overall, our results underscore that the utility of empathy can be a parsimonious foundation for the formation of prosociality, even impacting the behavior of adults in the field.

Référence

Sultan Mehmood, Shaheen Naseer et Daniel L. Chen, « Altruism in governance: Insights from randomized training for Pakistan's junior ministers », The Journal of Development Studies, vol. 170, n° 103317, septembre 2024.

Publié dans

The Journal of Development Studies, vol. 170, n° 103317, septembre 2024