Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization | 2021

Scapegoating in evaluation decisions

 

Abstract


Abstract Scapegoating – attributing inordinate blame for a negative outcome to a target individual or group – is considered an important driver of discrimination by psychologists, but has received little attention by economists. This paper helps fill the gap by providing evidence for scapegoating in a natural setting. Using data on three million driving tests held in Israel, I find that an increase in the number of unrelated traffic accident fatalities leads driving testers to discriminate against out-group students. Scapegoating characterizes all groups of testers – Jewish and Arab, male and female – and works to increase ethnic in-group bias and decrease gender out-group bias.

Volume 186
Pages 152-163
DOI 10.1016/J.JEBO.2021.03.025
Language English
Journal Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization

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