Money is packed with meaning, and it impacts our personalities, our
relationships, and how we think. As you might imagine, a lot of stuff
is going on in our brains when we think about money, and some of it is
surprising. Researchers in the emerging field of neuroeconomics are
drawing on psychology, neuroscience, and economics to give us picture of
the human brain on money. Let’s take a look.
1. Money kills empathy.
According to research, money actually reduces empathy and compassion.
One of the key ways humans feel empathy is through reading the facial
expressions of other humans. Seeing that someone has a sad face triggers
you to feel sad, too. But if you’re rich, not so much. Michael Kraus,
the co-author of a study discussed in Time,
told the magazine that people with fewer economic resources are
conditioned to respond to numerous vulnerabilities and threats, which
means they have to be more attuned to social cues. “You really need to
depend on others so they will tell you if a social threat or opportunity
is coming and that makes you more perceptive of emotions.” Rich people
can just sail along without worrying about so many threats, so they tend
to ignore how others feel.
Money also makes people behave more aggressively towards others.
Even fake money can do it: in a UC Berkeley study, researchers watched
two students playing Monopoly, one with much more Monopoly money than
the other. At first, the inequality seemed to make the richer student
uncomfortable, but soon enough the student with more money got
aggressive, smacking his pieces around and taunting the impoverished
player. Paul Piff and his fellow psychologists have consistently found
that high socioeconomic status and interpersonal disregard are closely
linked. So much for noblesse oblige.
2. Losing money hurts, literally.
The loss of money is known to share a similar psychological and
physiological system with physical pain. Researchers have found that money is actually a pain buffer.
In one experiment, participants were asked to rate their response to
hot water after counting money. The more money counted, the less pain
felt. On the other hand, people who had recently lost money rated the
hot water as more painful. Research also reveals that the anticipation
of pain heightens the desire for money.
People also hate losing money more than they love making it.
Psychologist and Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman has suggested this
aversion to loss may have evolutionary roots. For the primitive human,
threats or losses were a higher priority than opportunities, because an
opportunity might come again, but a threat could be your last.
3. More money, fewer ethics.
Just thinking about money can cause you to behave unethically. Researchers from Harvard and the University of Utah found
that people were more likely to lie and make immoral decisions after
being exposed to money-related words. The mere
exposure to the concept of money set off a “business decision frame” in
study participants, causing them to think narrowly in terms of
cost-benefit calculations and further their own interests without giving
a damn about moral niceities.
Money makes you dangerous, too. Researchers at Berkeley observed crosswalks in San Francisco and
found that people driving luxury cars were three times less likely than
those in more modest vehicles to give the right of way to pedestrians,
and they were four times more likely to cut off other drivers.
4. The more money you make, the more you think about money.
Conventional wisdom holds that the more of something we have, the
less important it’s supposed to be to us, but that’s not true with
money. Jeffrey Pfeffer, a professor of organizational behavior at
Stanford Graduate School of Business, found in his research that
the more money people are paid for each hour of work, the more
important that money becomes. And because money paid for work becomes
strongly connected to people’s feelings of self-esteem and self worth,
it can never be enough. The more we get, the more we need, and the more
we focus on it.
This paradoxical experience was summed up by Daniel Vasella, the
former CEO of Swiss pharmaceutical behemoth Novartis AG: “The strange
part is, the more I made, the more I got preoccupied with money,” he
told Fortune. “When suddenly I didn’t have to think about money as much,
I found myself starting to think increasingly about it.”
Pfeffer is pretty straightforward on what he thinks we could do about
skyrocketing executive compensation and its destructive social and
psychological effects: “We would do what we have done with other
addictive substances — tax it. That’s what public policy has done in the
past to restrict the use of legal drugs like alcohol and nicotine — we
tax them.” Good idea!
5. Men with a lot of testosterone do weird things with money.
Neoclassical economists have often argued that people will naturally
seek financial gain, no matter how small, and will do so in a rational
manner. But psychologists have found otherwise. The Economist magazine describes an
ultimatum game in which one player divides a pot of money between
himself and another. The second player then chooses whether to accept
the offer. If he rejects it, neither player benefits. Curiously, a low
offer is usually rejected, despite the fact that rejecting the offer
means that the players will get zilch.
Terence Burnham of Harvard University observed male players and
compared their testosterone levels using saliva samples. Turns out that
the ones who refused a stingy final offer had an average testosterone
level more than 50 percent higher than the average of those who took it.
The reason appears to be that the high testosterone people would rather
accept less themselves than see a rival get ahead. They seem to be
programmed to seek social dominance, and they will behave irrationally
trying to get it.
6. Your brain treats credit differently from cash.
Marketers know that we spend more with credit cards than we do with
cash — 12 to 18 percent more, according to a Dun & Bradstreet study.
That’s because our brains feel like the money associated with plastic
is an issue for the future rather than the present. Reward cards trick
us even further, making us feel that in addition to not really spending
money today, we’re getting stuff back through miles, points, and
whatnot, which induces us to spend still more.
The idea of putting off consequences, which is linked to plastic
cards, is so strong that it carries over into other decisions. A 2013
study in the journal Obesity found that children who pay for school
lunches with credit or debit cards buy less healthy foods, like desserts
over fruits, compared to those paying with cash.
7. The wealthy are perceived as evil-doers.
Americans are supposed to worship the wealthy, but according to
research presented in Scientifc American, most of us would be glad to
see them suffer. Studies show that lower-income people dislike and
distrust rich people, so much so that we get a kick out of their
struggles. University of Pennsylvania research revealed that most people
tend to associate perceived profits with perceived social harm — and
according to research mentioned above, they are very well-justified in
this perception.
When participants in the U Penn study were asked to rate various real
and made-up companies and industries, both liberals and conservative
participants ranked institutions thought to have higher profits with
more evil and wrong-doing across the board, regardless of the company or
industry's actions in reality.
from here
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