Abstract

Trust is essential for social interactions, cooperation and social order. Research has shown that social status and common group memberships are important determinants of receiving and reciprocating trust. However, social status and group membership can coincide or diverge–with potentially different effects. Our study contributes to the existing literature on the role of status and group membership by testing two separate trust-generating mechanisms against each other. We examine if individuals tend to place trust in high-status groups (irrespective of their own group membership) or, rather, if they tend to trust others with whom they share a common group membership. We assume that status group membership is signalled by cultural (musical) taste. This operationalization follows the theoretical reasoning of Bourdieu who argues that it is, above all, musical taste that classifies persons of different status. By demonstrating their “legitimate” cultural taste, upper-class members distinguish themselves from the middle and lower classes and signal their social status, thereby creating awe, respect and an air of trustworthiness. We report evidence from online experiments with incentivized trust games, which enable us to separate the two trust-generating mechanisms. We find no evidence that persons with “legitimate” tastes are generally trusted more. Instead, our results clearly demonstrate ingroup favouritism towards persons with a similar taste. Participants place more trust in members of their own group and expect them to be more trustworthy. In other words: members of taste-based groups trust each other more than members of different-taste-based groups. Interestingly, this group-based trust is not always justified inasmuch as received trust is not necessarily reciprocated more strongly by own group members. This suggests that ingroup favouritism is, at least in part, driven by false beliefs.

Highlights

  • Placing trust in trustworthy individuals is key for establishing collective goods, cooperation and collaboration and has far-reaching consequences for the order, development and prosperity of societies [1,2]

  • We consider two ways in which membership of social groups may affect trust and trustworthiness: We investigate if individuals trust others with high social status or, rather, others with whom they share a mutual social group

  • In order to assess the status perception hypothesis, we analysed whether lovers of folk and classical music fans are perceived differently in terms of their social status

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Summary

Introduction

Placing trust in trustworthy individuals is key for establishing collective goods, cooperation and collaboration and has far-reaching consequences for the order, development and prosperity of societies [1,2]. Making well-informed decisions may be easy when we have previous experiences with our interaction partners. In contemporary societies placing trust in the right people has become increasingly demanding. In many situations, individuals do not have sufficient information on whether their interaction partners are trustworthy or not

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