Abstract:Recent literature in the fields of Political Economy, New Institutional Economics and New Cultural Economics has converged in the use of empirical methods, offering a series of consistent quantitative analysis of values. However, an overarching positive methodology for the value-free study of values has not yet precipitated. Building on a mixed systematic-integrative literature review of a pluralistic variety of perspectives from Adam Smith’s ‘Impartial’ Spectator to modern moral philosophy, the current study … Show more
“…This is so because culture embodies a tailor-made set of socially affirmed immaterial beliefs and values, which do not have an intrinsic value but are socially constructed. Yet, boundedly, people prefer to believe in them as if they are intrinsic, in order for this set of rules to serve as a psychological tool for handling uncertainty (Delton et al 2011 ; Tubadji 2020c ). Namely, having a “certain” cultural compass of heuristics serves for an illusionary alleviation of our fear of the unknown and the lack of clear uncertainty avoidance strategy (Kahneman et al 1991 ; Akerlof and Shiller 2010 ).…”
Section: Evolutionary View On Culture As Part Of the Essentialsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, there is available aggregate data from Google Trends regarding searches in Google about the validated positive psychology word “anxiety,” which stands for the mental health state of the searching individual, as well as the self-explained word “death.” This study uses this linguistic signifier of meaning and mental health on aggregate level and links it to indicators of socio-economic development (in this case public spending on cultural services). This follows the linguistic narrative economics of meaning CBD approach (see Tubadji 2020a , b , c , d , e for more details on this approach). This approach has been applied in its full extent elsewhere—addressing on the aggregate level the study of mental health and public policy during the pandemic periods across different countries (Tubadji et al 2020a ).…”
Section: Happiness In Covid-19 Times: and Empirical Operationalizatiomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This entity is embodied in norms and beliefs and material goods and services. CBD also draws a temporal divide between past culture (of both material and immaterial kind), termed cultural heritage, and present norms and beliefs and their related goods and services, termed living culture (see Tubadji 2012 , 2013 , 2020a , b , c ; Tubadji and Montalto 2020 ). 1 This study adopts the CBD definition of culture.…”
This paper aims to clarify the role of culture as a public good that serves to preserve mental health. It tests the evolutionary hypothesis that cultural consumption triggers a microeconomic mechanism for the self-defense of mental health from uncertainty. The COVID-19 pandemic offers a natural experiment of cultural consumption under increased uncertainty. Using primary data from a pilot survey conducted online during the pandemic and applying Probit and Heckman selection models, the study analyzes levels of happiness and propensity to help others. The results suggest that past consumption of culture is associated with higher happiness levels during crises. Moreover, spontaneous cultural practices (such as group singing) during times of uncertainty are associated with an increase in the pro-social propensity to help others. These findings highlight culture as a tool for promoting mental health at the micro level and social capital resilience at the aggregate level.
“…This is so because culture embodies a tailor-made set of socially affirmed immaterial beliefs and values, which do not have an intrinsic value but are socially constructed. Yet, boundedly, people prefer to believe in them as if they are intrinsic, in order for this set of rules to serve as a psychological tool for handling uncertainty (Delton et al 2011 ; Tubadji 2020c ). Namely, having a “certain” cultural compass of heuristics serves for an illusionary alleviation of our fear of the unknown and the lack of clear uncertainty avoidance strategy (Kahneman et al 1991 ; Akerlof and Shiller 2010 ).…”
Section: Evolutionary View On Culture As Part Of the Essentialsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, there is available aggregate data from Google Trends regarding searches in Google about the validated positive psychology word “anxiety,” which stands for the mental health state of the searching individual, as well as the self-explained word “death.” This study uses this linguistic signifier of meaning and mental health on aggregate level and links it to indicators of socio-economic development (in this case public spending on cultural services). This follows the linguistic narrative economics of meaning CBD approach (see Tubadji 2020a , b , c , d , e for more details on this approach). This approach has been applied in its full extent elsewhere—addressing on the aggregate level the study of mental health and public policy during the pandemic periods across different countries (Tubadji et al 2020a ).…”
Section: Happiness In Covid-19 Times: and Empirical Operationalizatiomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This entity is embodied in norms and beliefs and material goods and services. CBD also draws a temporal divide between past culture (of both material and immaterial kind), termed cultural heritage, and present norms and beliefs and their related goods and services, termed living culture (see Tubadji 2012 , 2013 , 2020a , b , c ; Tubadji and Montalto 2020 ). 1 This study adopts the CBD definition of culture.…”
This paper aims to clarify the role of culture as a public good that serves to preserve mental health. It tests the evolutionary hypothesis that cultural consumption triggers a microeconomic mechanism for the self-defense of mental health from uncertainty. The COVID-19 pandemic offers a natural experiment of cultural consumption under increased uncertainty. Using primary data from a pilot survey conducted online during the pandemic and applying Probit and Heckman selection models, the study analyzes levels of happiness and propensity to help others. The results suggest that past consumption of culture is associated with higher happiness levels during crises. Moreover, spontaneous cultural practices (such as group singing) during times of uncertainty are associated with an increase in the pro-social propensity to help others. These findings highlight culture as a tool for promoting mental health at the micro level and social capital resilience at the aggregate level.
“…The fourth robustness check compares alternative population change hypotheses that may shed further insight on the results about our Tiebout–‐Hirschman–‐Rothschild model and its social‐closure based trigger. Our original hypothesis has its roots in the sociological notion of social closure (see Tubadji, 2020; Weber, 1922), where one group compares itself to people in the same place with a different identity, who are perceived as a competing group and whose prosperity triggers feelings of relative deprivation with the first group. The prosperity of the competing group is approximated in our study through size of between‐group‐mobility differences which is hypothesized by our Tiebout–‐Hirschman–‐Rothschild model to be the trigger of pro‐Brexit voting behaviour.…”
This paper promotes the idea of a culturally‐sensitive Tiebout–Hirschman–Rothschild mechanism underpinning the UK's 2016 Brexit result. Our culture‐based development (CBD) model asserts a trade‐off between two rival types of voting: voting with one's feet or voting in a radical way due to being unable to vote with one's feet, akin to a protest vote. We explore the effects on the Brexit vote of shares of public spending on culture and a particular type of migration dynamic that triggers social closure. Our findings reveal that strong support for the Leave campaign was encountered in areas with lower local government expenditure on culture and in areas with higher outflows of UK residents. Previous literature had found that left‐behind places and places with concentrations of highly educated commuters are the pro‐Brexit nests. Our CBD mechanism of perceived relative deprivation offers a reconciling explanation of these seemingly controversial findings.
“…The CBD theoretical model builds on Adam Smith's ideas of the Impartial Spectator, that is, an internal code of what is right and good. CBD theory expects that there exist cultural deviations in local ethics that create locally specific perceptions of the Impartial Spectator (Tubadji, 2020). Hence, people from different cultural backgrounds may experience the same attitude but with a different level of affect.…”
Artificial intelligence (AI) is a cost-efficient innovation that challenges customers' consumption patterns and fears of uncertainty. This study assesses whether the likelihood that consumers adopt AI in banking services depends on tastes across different cultures. We propose a culturally-augmented Arrow-Bilir-Sorensen model to assess the propensity that consumers use AI. Analyses of a unique ING Bank dataset encompassing 11,000 respondents from 11 countries reveal that success rates for the diffusion of robo-advisory financial services in retail banking vary substantially due to the cultural boundedness of choice. This bias seems to be associated with social capital rather than the fear of novelty.
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