Buying green may prompt people to steal or lie
October 8th, 2009 - 5:15 pm ICT by IANSToronto, Oct 8 (IANS) Just being around green products can make us behave more altruistically, says a new research. But buying those same products can have the opposite effect.
Researchers found that buying green can lead people to behave less altruisticly, and can even make them more likely to steal and lie than after buying conventional products.
Buying products that claim to be made with low environmental impact can set up “moral credentials” in people’s minds that give licence to selfish or questionable behaviour.
“This was not done to point a finger at consumers who buy green products. The message is bigger,” says Nina Mazar, marketing professor at University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management and a self-admitted green consumer.
“At the end of the day, if we do one moral thing, it doesn’t necessarily mean we will be morally better in other things as well.”
Mazar, along with her co-author Chen-Bo Zhong, professor of organisational behaviour at the Rotman School, conducted three experiments.
The first found that people perceived green consumers to be more cooperative, altruistic and ethical than those who purchased conventional products.
The second experiment showed that participants merely exposed to products from a green store shared more money in a subsequent experimental game, but those who actually made purchases in that store shared less.
The final experiment revealed that participants who bought items in the green store showed evidence of lying and stealing money in a subsequent lab game.
The study is slated for publication in Psychological Science.
- Buying green could make you do something immoral or illegal - Oct 08, 2009
- Environmentally friendly shoppers likely to cheat - Mar 18, 2010
- Darkness 'can license dishonesty' - Mar 02, 2010
- Darkness encourages cheating - Mar 03, 2010
- Power, alcohol, anonymity make you drop guard - Jun 23, 2011
- Fast food makes us impatient - Apr 18, 2010
- Pretty things lead to budget-busting spending spree - Dec 15, 2010
- Tighter cultural norms frown on women as leaders - Mar 09, 2012
- Rude behaviour among employees turns off customers - Jul 23, 2010
- If it's too easy, we are more likely to cheat: Study - Nov 24, 2010
- Durex launches e-store to increase condom sales - Oct 11, 2010
- Seasonal depression can send markets crashing - Oct 17, 2011
- Designer items tempt us to spend lavishly - Dec 15, 2010
- When status on the mind, people forgo luxury for green products - Mar 18, 2010
- Escape blame by being a victim, not a hero: Study - Feb 17, 2011
Tags: co author, conventional products, credentials, environmental impact, experimental game, green consumers, marketing, mazar, nina, participants, psychological science, rotman school of management, school of management, stealing money, university of toronto