Political Corruption and Social Trust: An Experimental Approach
Abstract
Few experimental studies have investigated important factors for people’s perceptions
of the trustworthiness of others. Building on theories that point at the importance of
trustworthy government institutions, an experiment was conducted to examine factors
of importance for people’s propensity to relate trust in authorities to trust in others. A
group of 64 undergraduate students responded to a number of scenarios in which they
observed another person’s efforts to try to receive immediate assistance from an
authority. Descriptions of the other person’s encounter with the authority varied
within groups in terms of whether or not a bribe was used in order to receive
immediate assistance, whether the other person or the authority was the initiator, and
outcome in terms of whether immediate assistance was approved or declined. Type of
authority was a between-groups factor. Subsequent to each scenario, participants’
levels of various aspects of vertical and horizontal trust were measured. As
hypothesized, the results showed strong effects of bribe, initiator, and outcome on all
dependent measures. Bribe, initiator, and approved assistance decreased both vertical
and horizontal trust. The results give support for the idea that trust in an authority
influences the perceptions of the trustworthiness of others in general.
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Date
2005Author
Eek, Daniel
Rothstein, Bo
Keywords
vertical trust
horizontal trust
social trust
social capital
corruption
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2005:03
Language
eng