Abstract

Moral licensing describes the phenomenon that displaying moral behavior can lead to subsequent immoral behavior. This is usually explained by the idea that an initial moral act affirms the moral self-image and hence licenses subsequent immoral acts. Previous meta-analyses on moral licensing indicate significant overall effects of d> .30. However, several large replication studies have either not found the effect or reported a substantially smaller effect size. The present article investigated whether this can be attributed to publication bias. Datasets from two previous meta-analyses on moral licensing were compared and when necessary modified. The larger dataset was used for the present analyses. Using PET-PEESE and a three-parameter-selection-model (3-PSM), we found some evidence for publication bias. The adjusted effect sizes were reduced to d= -0.05, p= .64 and d= 0.18, p= .002, respectively. While the first estimate could be an underestimation, we also found indications that the second estimate might exaggerate the true effect size. It is concluded that both the evidence for and the size of moral licensing effects has likely been inflated by publication bias. Furthermore, our findings indicate that culture moderates the moral licensing effect. Recommendations for future meta-analytic and empirical work are given. Subsequent studies on moral licensing should be adequately powered and ideally pre-registered.

Highlights

  • Moral licensing theory postulates that initially displaying a moral action increases the probability of subsequent behavior that is immoral, unethical or otherwise problematic (Merritt, Effron, & Monin, 2010)

  • The 3-PSM estimates appeared to be substantially larger than those from PET-PEESE. This might to some degree be attributable to the fact that PET-PEESE does in some cases underestimate a true effect size (Carter et al, 2018)

  • There are two plausible reasons suggesting that the 3-PSM might have overestimated the true effect size: (1) Its impaired performance when focal and non-focal effect sizes are averaged for effect size calculation and (2) the issue that the “true” selection threshold might occasionally be above one-tailed p = .025 in practice

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Summary

Antonia Bott

Moral licensing describes the phenomenon that displaying moral behavior can lead to subsequent immoral behavior. Moderators of the moral licensing effect are largely unknown (Blanken, van de Ven, & Zeelenberg, 2015), but Simbrunner and Schlegelmilch (2017) recently provided evidence for two potential moderators: (1) The culture of the studied population and (2) the type of control condition (neutral vs immoral previous behavior). They argued that the cultural background of participants shapes their moral standards by processes of socialization and influences their moral selfconcept. They showed that the effect was larger when a previous moral behavior was contrasted with a previous immoral behavior instead of a neutral control condition

Replication issues
HAS THE EVIDENCE FOR MORAL LICENSING BEEN INFLATED BY PUBLICATION BIAS?
Testing and correcting for publication bias
Ensuring the independence of effect sizes
Action taken
ES coding
Discrepancy ES coding
Discrepancy Inclusion
Moderator coding
Course of Action
Publication bias analyses
Exploratory analyses
Discussion
Moderator effects
Recommendations for further research
Findings
Conclusion
Open Science Practices
Full Text
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