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%T With a little help from my friends: the relational incongruence of benefiting financially from prosocially motivated favors
%A Arnestad, Mads Nordmo
%A Glambek, Mats
%A Selart, Marcus
%J Frontiers in Behavioral Economics
%V 3
%D 2024
%K helping behavior; pro-sociability; effort cost; social relationship; labor cost; financial motivation; social motivation
%@ 2813-5296
%X To improve our understanding of how people engage in altruistic behavior, it is important to investigate the motives provided by help recipients and how these motives influence givers' helping behaviors. Method: In the present study we conduct three experiments (total N = 606), exploring how the financial motivation of help recipients can affect givers' helping behaviors. Results and discussion: We find that people like to help others but resent helping those motivated by immediate financial gains. Study 1 shows that the recipient of help influenced the responses of the helpers depending on whether the recipient was making a sales profit from this help or not. An influencing factor was whether the recipient could provide an excuse for making such a profit. Study 2 replicated these findings also in conditions in which other kinds of profits were applied. Study 3 confirmed the results in conditions in which helpers were informed about recipients' financial motives before deciding whether to help.
%C CHE
%G en
%9 Zeitschriftenartikel
%W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org
%~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info