
handle: 10419/170905 , 10419/168454 , 10419/171052
This paper studies the causal effect of status differences on moral disengagement and violence. To measure violent behavior, in the experiment, a subject can inflict a painful electric shock on another subject in return for money. We exogenously vary relative status in the realm of sexual attractiveness. In three between-subject conditions, the assigned other subject is either of higher, lower or equal status. The incidence of electric shocks is substantially higher among subjects matched with higher- and lower-status others, relative to subjects matched with equal-status others. This causal evidence on the role of status inequality on violence suggests an important societal cost of economic and social inequalities.
inequality, laboratory experiments, ddc:330, Violence, morality, Morality, Status, Laboratory Experiments, violence, Inequality, C91, Z13, D03, A13, status
inequality, laboratory experiments, ddc:330, Violence, morality, Morality, Status, Laboratory Experiments, violence, Inequality, C91, Z13, D03, A13, status
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