Boyer Pascal, Petersen Michael Bang
Departments of Psychology and Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO 63130.
Department of Political Science and Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies, Aarhus University, 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark.
Behav Brain Sci. 2017 Oct 12;41:e158. doi: 10.1017/S0140525X17001960.
The domain of "folk-economics" consists in explicit beliefs about the economy held by laypeople, untrained in economics, about such topics as, for example, the causes of the wealth of nations, the benefits or drawbacks of markets and international trade, the effects of regulation, the origins of inequality, the connection between work and wages, the economic consequences of immigration, or the possible causes of unemployment. These beliefs are crucial in forming people's political beliefs and in shaping their reception of different policies. Yet, they often conflict with elementary principles of economic theory and are often described as the consequences of ignorance, irrationality, or specific biases. As we will argue, these past perspectives fail to predict the particular contents of popular folk-economic beliefs and, as a result, there is no systematic study of the cognitive factors involved in their emergence and cultural success. Here we propose that the cultural success of particular beliefs about the economy is predictable if we consider the influence of specialized, largely automatic inference systems that evolved as adaptations to ancestral human small-scale sociality. These systems, for which there is independent evidence, include free-rider detection, fairness-based partner choice, ownership intuitions, coalitional psychology, and more. Information about modern mass-market conditions activates these specific inference systems, resulting in particular intuitions, for example, that impersonal transactions are dangerous or that international trade is a zero-sum game. These intuitions in turn make specific policy proposals more likely than others to become intuitively compelling, and, as a consequence, exert a crucial influence on political choices.
“民间经济学”的范畴包括非经济学专业人士对经济所秉持的明确信念,这些信念涉及诸如国家财富的成因、市场与国际贸易的利弊、监管的影响、不平等的根源、工作与工资的关系、移民的经济后果或失业的可能原因等主题。这些信念对于形成人们的政治信念以及塑造他们对不同政策的接受程度至关重要。然而,它们常常与经济理论的基本原理相冲突,并且常被描述为无知、非理性或特定偏见的结果。正如我们将论证的那样,这些过去的观点无法预测大众民间经济信念的具体内容,因此,对于其产生和文化成功所涉及的认知因素,尚无系统的研究。在此我们提出,如果考虑到专门的、很大程度上自动的推理系统的影响,关于经济的特定信念的文化成功是可预测的,这些系统是作为对人类祖先小规模社会性的适应而演化出来的。有独立证据表明,这些系统包括搭便车检测、基于公平的伙伴选择、所有权直觉、联盟心理等等。关于现代大众市场状况的信息激活了这些特定的推理系统,从而产生特定的直觉——例如,非个人交易是危险的,或者国际贸易是零和博弈。这些直觉反过来又使特定的政策提议比其他提议更有可能在直觉上具有说服力,因此,对政治选择产生至关重要的影响。