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Argument-inconsistency in charity appeals: Statistical information about the scope of the problem decrease helping toward a single identified victim but not helping toward many non-identified victims in a refugee crisis context
Institution:1. Department of Marketing, Antai College of Economics and Management, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Room 116, Building 4, 535 Fa Hua Zhen Road, Shanghai, China;2. Department of Marketing, Faculty of Business Administration, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, No. 12, Chak Cheung Street, Shatin, N.T., Hong Kong;1. John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, 79 John F. Kennedy Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, United States;2. Development Economics Group & Center for Development and Cooperation (NADEL), ETH Zurich, Clausiusstrasse 37, Zurich 8092, Switzerland;1. Robins Kaplan LLP, 800 Lasalle Avenue, Suite 2800, Minneapolis, MN 55402;2. Center for Economic and Social Research, 635 Downey Way, Los Angeles, CA 90089;1. Florida International University, Miami, FL 33174, United States;2. Mississippi State University, Starkville, MS 39762, United States
Abstract:It is known that both the characteristics of the victims one can help and the existence of victims one cannot help influence economic helping decisions in suboptimal ways. The aim of this study was to systematically test if these two aspects interact with each other. In Studies 1 and 2, we created hypothetical charity appeals related to the Syrian refugee crisis and factorially manipulated characteristics of victims possible to help (one identified child/nine non-identified children) and presence of statistical information about the scope and nature of the problem (information-box absent/present). We found a significant interaction effect both when using self-rated helping intention (Study 1), and when using actual donation behavior as the dependent variable (Study 2). Statistical information decreased helping intentions toward a single identified child but had no, or even a small positive effect on helping nine non-identified children. In Study 3, non-student participants reading a charity appeal with both a story about one identified child and statistical information donated less often than participants reading appeals with either only a story about one identified child or only statistical information. We suggest that both emotional arguments (e.g., a story and picture of an identified child in need) and analytical arguments (e.g., detailed statistical information about the scope and nature of the problem) can make us more motivated to help refugees, but that mixing different argument-types can make charity appeals internally inconsistent and decrease donations.
Keywords:Charity appeals  Helping refugees  Identified victim effect  Pseudoinefficacy  Anticipated warm glow  Argument-inconsistency
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