Navarro-Carrillo Ginés, Valor-Segura Inmaculada, Lozano Luis M, Moya Miguel
Mind, Brain and Behavior Research Center, Department of Social Psychology, Universidad de Granada, Granada, Spain.
Mind, Brain and Behavior Research Center, Department of Methodology for Behavioral Sciences, Universidad de Granada, Granada, Spain.
Front Psychol. 2018 Oct 15;9:1955. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01955. eCollection 2018.
After the global economic collapse triggered by the Great Recession, there has been an increased interest in the potential psychological implications of periods of economic decline. Recent evidence suggests that negative personal experiences linked to the economic crisis may lead to diminished generalized trust (i.e., the belief that most of the people of the society are honest and can be trusted). Adding to the growing literature on the psychological consequences of the economic crisis, we propose that the perceived personal impact of the economic crisis not only would undermine generalized trust but also may lead to increased interpersonal trust (i.e., directed to specific and close people) and depersonalized in-group trust [i.e., directed to individuals who, while strangers, belong to the same group (e.g., social class)]. Across three studies ( = 1379), we tested these central hypotheses and ascertained whether the perceived personal impact of the crisis would predict these types of trust (assessed using questionnaire and behavioral measures) independent of individuals' socioeconomic status. Non-experimental data from Study 1 revealed that a higher perceived personal impact of the crisis is related to lower levels of generalized trust and higher levels of interpersonal trust. These effects were independent of participants' socioeconomic status. Non-experimental data from Study 2 replicated the findings obtained in Study 1 and also showed a positive association between the perceived personal impact of the crisis and depersonalized in-group trust. This pattern of results emerged even after controlling for socioeconomic status, gender, age, political orientation, religiosity, and unemployment status. In Study 3, using an experimental design, we found that the salience of a possible economic downturn led to decreased generalized trust and increased interpersonal and depersonalized in-group trust - independently of socioeconomic status - compared with the control condition. These results challenge the conventional wisdom that economic crises invariably undermine trust in others. The implications of the present research as well as future research directions are discussed.
在大衰退引发全球经济崩溃之后,人们对经济衰退时期潜在的心理影响越来越感兴趣。最近的证据表明,与经济危机相关的负面个人经历可能会导致普遍信任的降低(即相信社会中的大多数人是诚实且可信赖的)。在关于经济危机心理后果的文献不断增加的背景下,我们提出,经济危机对个人的感知影响不仅会破坏普遍信任,还可能导致人际信任增加(即指向特定且亲密的人)和非个人化的群体内信任增加[即指向虽然是陌生人但属于同一群体(如社会阶层)的个人]。在三项研究(N = 1379)中,我们检验了这些核心假设,并确定经济危机对个人的感知影响是否会独立于个人的社会经济地位来预测这些类型的信任(使用问卷和行为测量方法进行评估)。研究1的非实验数据显示,对危机的个人感知影响越大,普遍信任水平越低,人际信任水平越高。这些影响独立于参与者的社会经济地位。研究2的非实验数据重复了研究1的结果,还表明危机的个人感知影响与非个人化的群体内信任之间存在正相关。即使在控制了社会经济地位、性别、年龄、政治倾向、宗教信仰和失业状况之后,这种结果模式仍然出现。在研究3中,我们采用实验设计发现,与控制条件相比,可能的经济衰退的显著性导致普遍信任降低,人际信任和非个人化的群体内信任增加——独立于社会经济地位。这些结果挑战了经济危机总是会破坏对他人信任的传统观念。本文讨论了本研究的意义以及未来的研究方向。