Irlenbusch, B., Mussweiler, T., Saxler, D., Shalvi, S. and Weiss, A. (2020). Similarity increases collaborative cheating Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 178:148--173.
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Affiliated author
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Publication year2020
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JournalJournal of Economic Behavior and Organization
We report two experimental studies testing how a cognitive feeling of similarity affects dishonesty in individual and collaborative tasks when cheating hurts others. By employ- ing a novel die-in-the-box paradigm with a total of 1080 subjects, we find that a sense of similarity (vs. dissimilarity) tends to increase dishonesty in settings highlighting the re- lationship with a collaborator, but tends to decrease dishonesty in settings highlighting the relationship with others who suffer from cheating. Corroborating these results, a code of conduct highlighting similarity towards the firm{\textquoteright}s employees leads to higher levels of cheating than a code of conduct highlighting similarity towards other members of the so- ciety. The results provide insights into how to craft effective organizational codes of ethical conduct.