Abstract

Studies show that people are concerned with other people's consumption position in a varying degree with respect to the type of goods consumed and individual characteristics. Using both survey experiments and a large survey of subjective well-being (SWB) dataset, this paper aims to investigate the association between the degree of empathic capacity and positional concerns for consumption items involving pleasure and pain. The paper exploits both empathy quotient (EQ) and interpersonal reactivity index (IRI) measures of empathic capacity, i.e., dispositional empathy, which are sufficient measures capturing affective and cognitive aspects of empathy. Positional concerns are identified directly using a series of stated choice experiments and indirectly using the SWB approach. The main result of the paper is that positional concerns vary substantially with the levels of empathic capacity. Both EQ and IRI are found to be positively associated with positional concerns for “goods” (e.g., after-tax income, market value of a luxury car), reflecting a degree of self-regarded feelings and behavior to reduce personal distress, and negatively associated with positional concerns for “bads” (e.g., working hours and poverty rates), reflecting a degree of other-regarding feelings and behavior. The results are robust with respect to various checks including statistical specifications, reference groups, and omitted variables (e.g., prosocial behavior and competitivity) that could bias the results.

Highlights

  • Empathy is one of the basic processes that make us connect with other people’s feelings, emotions, and experiences (Batson, 1987, 1991; Eisenberg and Miller, 1987; Eisenberg et al, 1994; Brandstätter, 2000; Keum and Shin, 2016)

  • Overall MDPC As the first step of our analysis, we present the share of positional respondents—unconditional estimates of MDPC—split by goods and choice situations in Column I of Table 1

  • Model Specification To investigate how positional concerns are heterogeneous with respect to the degree of empathic capacity, we are going to estimate a series of well-being equations

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Summary

Introduction

Empathy is one of the basic processes that make us connect with other people’s feelings, emotions, and experiences (Batson, 1987, 1991; Eisenberg and Miller, 1987; Eisenberg et al, 1994; Brandstätter, 2000; Keum and Shin, 2016). How we emotionally connect with and react to other people’s feelings, emotions, experiences of pleasure and pain might be one of the building blocks of processes of social comparisons (“positional” or “status” concerns) with others (Tesser et al, 1988; Tesser, 1991; Brandstätter, 2000). The present paper aims to investigate how people’s degree of empathic capacity relates to their positional concerns with respect to consumption goods associated with experiences of pleasure and pain

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