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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(28): e2112726119, 2022 07 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35867734

ABSTRACT

Physicians' professional ethics require that they put patients' interests ahead of their own and that they should allocate limited medical resources efficiently. Understanding physicians' extent of adherence to these principles requires understanding the social preferences that lie behind them. These social preferences may be divided into two qualitatively different trade-offs: the trade-off between self and other (altruism) and the trade-off between reducing differences in payoffs (equality) and increasing total payoffs (efficiency). We experimentally measure social preferences among a nationwide sample of practicing physicians in the United States. Our design allows us to distinguish empirically between altruism and equality-efficiency orientation and to accurately measure both trade-offs at the level of the individual subject. We further compare the experimentally measured social preferences of physicians with those of a representative sample of Americans, an "elite" subsample of Americans, and a nationwide sample of medical students. We find that physicians' altruism stands out. Although most physicians place a greater weight on self than on other, the share of physicians who place a greater weight on other than on self is twice as large as for all other samples-32% as compared with 15 to 17%. Subjects in the general population are the closest to physicians in terms of altruism. The higher altruism among physicians compared with the other samples cannot be explained by income or age differences. By contrast, physicians' preferences regarding equality-efficiency orientation are not meaningfully different from those of the general sample and elite subsample and are less efficiency oriented than medical students.


Subject(s)
Altruism , Physicians , Professionalism , Age Factors , Humans , Income , Physicians/ethics , Physicians/psychology , United States
2.
J Public Econ ; 196: 104389, 2021 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36536637

ABSTRACT

We examine Chinese cities' COVID-19 reopening plans as a window into governments' economic and social priorities. We measure reopenings based on official government news announcements, and show that these are predicted by citizen discontent, as captured by Baidu searches for terms such as "unemployment" and "protest" in the prior week. The effects are particularly strong early in the epidemic, indicating a priority on initiating economic recovery as early as possible. These results indicate that even a non-democratic government may respond to citizen concerns, possibly to minimize dissent.

3.
Science ; 356(6340): 803-804, 2017 May 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28546172
4.
Science ; 349(6254): aab0096, 2015 Sep 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26383958

ABSTRACT

We studied the distributional preferences of an elite cadre of Yale Law School students, a group that will assume positions of power in U.S. society. Our experimental design allows us to test whether redistributive decisions are consistent with utility maximization and to decompose underlying preferences into two qualitatively different tradeoffs: fair-mindedness versus self-interest, and equality versus efficiency. Yale Law School subjects are more consistent than subjects drawn from the American Life Panel, a diverse sample of Americans. Relative to the American Life Panel, Yale Law School subjects are also less fair-minded and substantially more efficiency-focused. We further show that our measure of equality-efficiency tradeoffs predicts Yale Law School students' career choices: Equality-minded subjects are more likely to be employed at nonprofit organizations.


Subject(s)
Administrative Personnel/psychology , Career Choice , Power, Psychological , Resource Allocation , Social Justice/psychology , Adult , Attitude , Employment , Female , Humans , Jurisprudence , Organizations, Nonprofit , Public Opinion , Students , United States
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