论文标题
种族和性别在跨国国家影响决策:俄罗斯的案例
Ethnicity and gender influence the decision making in a multinational state: The case of Russia
论文作者
论文摘要
个人在经济决策中的行为取决于种族,性别,社会环境,个人特征等因素。但是,在现代和跨国公司等俄罗斯联邦等现代和跨国公司中,不同种族的土著人口之间尚未对决策的独特特征进行正确的研究。在解决这个问题时,我们在莫斯科(俄罗斯的首都)和雅库茨克(俄罗斯大部分地区的俄罗斯首都与主要非俄罗斯居民的首都)之间进行了一系列实验。我们调查了社会化对囚犯困境游戏,最后通游戏和信任游戏中参与者策略的影响。在基准阶段,在社会化之前,对Yakuts的合作率,平等主义和信任的速度高于由不熟悉的人组成的群体的俄罗斯人。在社会化之后,对于俄罗斯人,所有这些指标都大大增加。而对于Yakuts,合作率仅表明了趋势的上升。无论社会化阶段如何,Yakuts的特征是相对不变的指标。此外,Yakutsk女性的合作和信任率比Yakuts的男性在社交之前就更高。社会化后,我们观察到男性和女性指标的一致性,包括俄罗斯人和Yakuts。因此,我们得出的结论是,尽管经济,政治和社会状况相同,但在一个国家内部可能存在文化差异。
Individuals' behavior in economic decisions depends on such factors as ethnicity, gender, social environment, personal traits. However, the distinctive features of decision making have not been studied properly so far between indigenous populations from different ethnicities in a modern and multinational state like the Russian Federation. Addressing this issue, we conducted a series of experiments between the Russians in Moscow (the capital of Russia) and the Yakuts in Yakutsk (the capital of Russian region with the mostly non-Russian residents). We investigated the effect of socialization on participants' strategies in the Prisoner's Dilemma game, Ultimatum game, and Trust game. At the baseline stage, before socialization, the rates of cooperation, egalitarianism, and trust for the Yakuts are higher than for the Russians in groups composed of unfamiliar people. After socialization, for the Russians all these indicators increase considerably; whereas, for the Yakuts only the rate of cooperation demonstrates a rising trend. The Yakuts are characterized by relatively unchanged indicators regardless of the socialization stage. Furthermore, the Yakutsk females have higher rates of cooperation and trust than the Yakuts males before socialization. After socialization, we observed the alignment in indicators for males and females both for the Russians and for the Yakuts. Hence, we concluded that cultural differences can exist inside one country despite the equal economic, politic, and social conditions.