Priming prosocial behavior and expectations in response to the Covid-19 pandemic -- Evidence from an online experiment
Valeria Fanghella, Thi-Thanh-Tam Vu, Luigi Mittone

TL;DR
This study investigates how different information primes about Covid-19's environmental and economic impacts influence individuals' expectations and prosocial behavior, revealing that primes significantly affect expectations but not prosocial actions.
Contribution
It provides experimental evidence on the differential effects of positive and negative pandemic-related information on expectations and prosociality during the Covid-19 crisis.
Findings
Priming influences expectations about future environmental quality and economic growth.
No significant effect of primes on prosocial behavior in the dictator game.
Environmental and economic primes shape optimistic or pessimistic outlooks.
Abstract
This paper studies whether and how differently projected information about the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic affects individuals' prosocial behavior and expectations on future outcomes. We conducted an online experiment with British participants (N=961) when the UK introduced its first lockdown and the outbreak was on its growing stage. Participants were primed with either the environmental or economic consequences (i.e., negative primes), or the environmental or economic benefits (i.e., positive primes) of the pandemic, or with neutral information. We measured priming effects on an incentivized take-and-give dictator game and on participants' expectations about future environmental quality and economic growth. Our results show that primes affect participants' expectations, but not their prosociality. In particular, participants primed with environmental consequences hold a more…
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Taxonomy
TopicsExperimental Behavioral Economics Studies · COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts · Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment
