It’s often said that money corrupts. But a new study says that just the thought of getting some hard cash will do the trick.
The report by University of Utah and Harvard researchers
found that individuals who could gain monetarily through unethical
behavior were more likely to demonstrate that behavior than those who
weren’t offered a financial gain.
“Were were interested in why good people would do bad behavior,” said
Kristin Smith-Crowe, a management professor and co-author of the study
released last month.
“We certainly found that the love of money is corrupting and just the
mere exposure to it makes people do bad things,” Smith-Crowe said.
Using 324 undergraduate students from the university, Smith-Crowe and
her colleagues conducted four separate “games” in two different groups.
One group was told of a financial reward for the behavior, the other
was told there was no financial reward for doing the same behavior.
In one game, students were presented with a series of scenarios in
which an unethical act was committed. They were asked how likely they
would be to engage in the same unethical acts for money. (The other
group was asked the same question without the monetary reward.)
In another, they played a “deception game,” in which a group could
earn more money by lying rather than telling the truth. (No reward to
the second group for lying.)
The third game presented the students with a scenario in which they
could choose to hire a candidate who promises to share insider
information on a competitor if hired. (No insider information on the
decision to hire someone for the second group.)
In the final trial, students engaged in a performance task in which
they could earn more money by being dishonest rather than being honest.
(No reward to the second group for being dishonest.)
The study found that participants who were merely exposed to the
concept of a monetary gain were more likely to demonstrate unethical
intentions, decisions, and behavior than the students in the separate
controlled condition— without the possibility of a financial reward.
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