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Cultural economics

Cultural economics is the branch of economics that studies the relation of culture to economic outcomes. Here, 'culture' is defined by shared beliefs and preferences of respective groups. Programmatic issues include whether and how much culture matters as to economic outcomes and what its relation is to institutions.[1] As a growing field in behavioral economics, the role of culture in economic behavior is increasingly being demonstrated to cause significant differentials in decision-making and the management and valuation of assets.

Overview

Applications include the study of religion,[2] social capital,[3] social norms,[4] social identity,[5] fertility,[6] beliefs in redistributive justice,[7] ideology,[8] hatred,[9] terrorism,[10] trust,[11] family ties,[12] long-term orientation,[13][14] and the culture of economics.[15][16] A general analytical theme is how ideas and behaviors are spread among individuals through the formation of social capital,[17] social networks[18] and processes such as social learning, as in the theory of social evolution[19] and information cascades.[20] Methods include case studies and theoretical and empirical modeling of cultural transmission within and across social groups.[21] In 2013 Said E. Dawlabani added the value systems approach to the cultural emergence aspect of macroeconomics.[22]

Development

Cultural economics develops from how wants and tastes are formed in society. This is partly due to nurture aspects, or what type of environment one is raised in, as it is the internalization of one's upbringing that shapes their future wants and tastes.[23] Acquired tastes can be thought of as an example of this, as they demonstrate how preferences can be shaped socially.[24]

A key thought area that separates the development of cultural economics from traditional economics is a difference in how individuals arrive at their decisions. While a traditional economist will view decision making as having both implicit and explicit consequences, a cultural economist would argue that an individual will not only arrive at their decision based on these implicit and explicit decisions but based on trajectories. These trajectories consist of regularities, which have been built up throughout the years and guide individuals in their decision-making process.[25]

Combining value systems and systems thinking

Economists have also started to look at cultural economics with a systems thinking approach. In this approach, the economy and culture are each viewed as a single system where "interaction and feedback effects were acknowledged, and where in particular the dynamic were made explicit".[26] In this sense, the interdependencies of culture and the economy can be combined and better understood by following this approach.

Said E. Dawlabani's book MEMEnomics: The Next-Generation Economic System[22] combines the ideas of value systems (see value (ethics)) and systems thinking to provide one of the first frameworks that explores the effect of economic policies on culture. The book explores the intersections of multiple disciplines such as cultural development, organizational behavior, and memetics all in an attempt to explore the roots of cultural economics.[27]

Growth

The advancing pace of new technology is transforming how the public consumes and shares culture. The cultural economic field has seen great growth with the advent of online social networking which has created productivity improvements in how culture is consumed. New technologies have also led to cultural convergence where all kinds of culture can be accessed on a single device. Throughout their upbringing, younger persons of the current generation are consuming culture faster than their parents ever did, and through new mediums. The smartphone is a blossoming example of this where books, music, talk, artwork and more can all be accessed on a single device in a matter of seconds.[28] This medium and the culture surrounding it is beginning to have an effect on the economy, whether it be increasing communication while lowering costs, lowering the barriers of entry to the technology economy, or making use of excess capacity.[29]

 
An example of culture being consumed via smartphone.

This field has also seen growth through the advent of new economic studies that have put on a cultural lens.

For example, Kafka and Kostis (2021) at a recent study published in the Journal of Comparative Economics, use an unbalanced panel dataset comprised from 34 OECD countries from 1981 to 2019, conclude that the cultural background during the overall period under consideration is characterized as post-materialistic and harms economic growth. Moreover, they highlight both theoretically and empirically the cultural backlash hypothesis since the cultural background of the countries under analysis presents a shift from traditional/materialistic (from 1981 up to 1998) to post-materialist values (from 1999 up to 2019). Doing so, they conclude on a positive effect of cultural background on economic growth when traditional / materialistic values prevail, and a negative effect when post-materialistic values prevail. These results highlight culture as a crucial factor for economic growth and indicate that economic policy makers should take it seriously into account before designing economic policy and in order to explain the effectiveness of economic policies implemented.

Another study on Europeans living with their families into adulthood was conducted by Paola Giuliano, a professor at UCLA. The study found that those of Southern European descent tend to live at home with their families longer than those of Northern European descent. Giuliano added cultural critique to her analysis of the research, revealing that it is Southern European culture to stay at home longer and then related this to how those who live at home longer have fewer children and start families later, thus contributing to Europe's falling birthrates.[30] Giuliano's work is an example of how the growth of cultural economics is beginning to spread across the field.[31]

Sustainable development

An area that cultural economics has a strong presence in is sustainable development. Sustainable development has been defined as "...development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs...".[32] Culture plays an important role in this as it can determine how people view preparing for these future generations. Delayed gratification is a cultural economic issue that developed countries are currently dealing with. Economists argue that to ensure that the future is better than today, certain measures must be taken such as collecting taxes or "going green" to protect the environment. Policies such as these are hard for today's politicians to promote who want to win the vote of today's voters who are concerned with the present and not the future. People want to see the benefits now, not in the future.[33]

Economist David Throsby has proposed the idea of culturally sustainable development which compasses both the cultural industries (such as the arts) and culture (in the societal sense). He has created a set of criteria in regards to for which policy prescriptions can be compared to in order to ensure growth for future generations. The criteria are as follows:[34]

  1. Advancement of material and non-material well-being: implies balance amongst economic, social, and cultural forces
  2. Intergenerational equity and the maintenance of cultural capital: current generation must recognize their responsibility to future generations
  3. Equity within the present generation: distribution of cultural resources must be fair
  4. Recognition of interdependence: policy must understand the connections between economic, cultural and other variables within an overall system.

With these guidelines, Throsby hopes to spur the recognition between culture and economics, which is something he believes has been lacking from popular economic discussions.

Cultural finance

Cultural finance a growing field in behavioral economics that studies the impact of cultural differences on individual financial decisions and on financial markets. Probably the first paper in this area was "The Role of Social Capital in Financial Development" by Luigi Guiso, Paola Sapienza, and Luigi Zingales.[35] The paper studied how well-known differences in social capital affected the use and availability of financial contracts across different parts of Italy. In areas of the country with high levels of social capital, households invest less in cash and more in stock, use more checks, have higher access to institutional credit, and make less use of informal credit. Few years later, the same authors published another paper "Trusting the Stock Market" where they show that a general lack of trust can limit stock market participation. Since trust has a strong cultural component, these two papers represent important contribution in cultural economics.

In 2007, Thorsten Hens and Mei Wang pointed out that indeed many areas of finance are influenced by cultural differences.[36] The role of culture in financial behavior is also increasingly being demonstrated to have highly significant effects on the management and valuation of assets. Using the dimensions of culture identified by Shalom Schwartz, it has been proved that corporate dividend payments are determined largely by the dimensions of Mastery and Conservatism.[37] Specifically, higher degrees of conservatism are associated with greater volumes and values of dividend payments, and higher degrees of mastery are associated with the total opposite. The effect of culture on dividend payouts has been further shown to be closely related to cultural differences in risk and time preferences.[38]

A different study assessed the role of culture on earnings management using Geert Hofstede's cultural dimensions and the index of earnings management developed by Christian Leutz; which includes the use of accrual alteration to reduce volatility in reported earnings, the use of accrual alteration to reduce volatility in reported operating cash flows, use of accounting discretion to mitigate the reporting of small losses, and the use of accounting discretion when reporting operating earnings. It was found that Hofstede's dimension of Individualism was negatively correlated with earnings management, and that uncertainty avoidance was positively correlated.[39] Behavioral economist Michael Taillard demonstrated that investment behaviors are caused primarily by behavioral factors, largely attributed to the influence of culture on the psychological frame of the investors in different nations, rather than rational ones by comparing the cultural dimensions used both by Geert Hofstede and Robert House, identifying strong and specific influences in risk aversion behavior resulting from the overlapping cultural dimensions between them that remained constant over a 20-year period.[40]

In regards to investing, it has been confirmed by multiple studies that greater differences between the cultures of various nations reduces the amount of investment between those countries. It was proven that both cultural differences between nations as well as the amount of unfamiliarity investors have with a culture not their own greatly reduces their willingness to invest in those nations, and that these factors have a negative impact with future returns, resulting in a cost premium on the degree of foreignness of an investment.[41][42] Despite this, equity markets continue to integrate as indicated by equity price comovements, of which the two largest contributing factors are the ratio of trade between nations and the ratio of GDP resulting from foreign direct investment.[43] Even these factors are the result of behavioral sources, however.[44] The UN World Investment Report (2013)[45] shows that regional integration is occurring at a more rapid rate than distant foreign relations, confirming an earlier study concluding that nations closer to each other tend to be more integrated.[46] Since increased cultural distance reduces the amount of foreign direct investment, this results in an accelerating curvilinear correlation between financial behavior and cultural distance.[47][48][49]

Culture also influences which factors are useful when predicting stock valuations. In Jordan, it was found that 84% of variability in stock returns were accounted for by using money supply, interest rate term structure, industry productivity growth, and risk premium; but were not influenced at all by inflation rates or dividend yield.[50] In Nigeria, both real GDP and Consumer Price Index were both useful predictive factors, but foreign exchange rate was not.[citation needed] In Zimbabwe, only money supply and oil prices were found to be useful predictors of stock market valuations.[51] India identified exchange rate, wholesale price index, gold prices, and market index as being useful factors.[52] A comprehensive global study out of Romania attempted to identify if any factors of stock market valuation were culturally universal, identifying interest rates, inflation, and industrial production, but found that exchange rate, currency exchange volume, and trade were all unique to Romania.[53]

Geographical origins of cultural traits

Geographical characteristics were linked recently to the emergence of cultural traits and differences in the intensity of these cultural traits across regions, countries and ethnic group. Geographical characteristics that were favorable for the usage of the plow in agriculture contributed to a gender gap in productivity, and to the emergence of gender roles in society.[54][55][56] Agricultural characteristics that led to a higher return to agricultural investment generated a process of selection, adaptation, and learning, that increase the level of long-term orientation in society.[13]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Press + button or ctrl + for small-font links below.
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      • Mark Casson (2006). "Culture and Economic Performance," Handbook of the Economics of Art and Culture, V. 1, Chap. 12, pp. 359–97. doi:[https://doi.org/10.1016%2FS1574-0676%2806%2901012-X 10.1016/S1574-0676(06)01012-X
      • Paul Streeten (2006}. "Culture and Economic Development", V. 1 Chap. 13, pp. 399–412. doi:10.1016/S1574-0676(06)01013-1
      • Jeanette D. Snowball, 2008. Measuring the Value of Culture, Springer. Description and Arrow-page searchable chapter links.
       • Joseph Henrich et al., 2005. "'Economic Man' in Cross-Cultural Perspective: Behavioral Experiments in 15 Small-scale Societies," Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 28(6), pp. 795–815. doi:10.1017/S0140525X05000142
       • Samuel Bowles, 1998. "Endogenous Preferences: The Cultural Consequences of Markets and Other Economic Institutions," Journal of Economic Literature, 36(1), pp. 75–111. JSTOR 2564952
       • Guido Tabellini, 2008. "Institutions and Culture," Journal of the European Economic Association, 6(2/3),2008), pp. 255–94. doi:10.1162/JEEA.2008.6.2-3.255   • Raquel Fernández, 2016. "Culture and Economics." The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition.
  2. ^ Laurence R. Iannaccone, 1998. "Introduction to the Economics of Religion," Journal of Economic Literature, 36(3), • Luigi Guiso, Paola Sapienza, Luigi Zingales, 2003, "People's Opium? Religion and Economic Attitudes", Journal of Monetary Economics, January 2003.https://doi.org/10.1016/S0304-3932(02)00202-7    • Laurence R. Iannaccone and Eli Berman, 2008. "religion, economics of," The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd Edition. Abstract.
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Journals

cultural, economics, alternate, standard, usage, cultural, economics, economics, arts, literature, branch, economics, that, studies, relation, culture, economic, outcomes, here, culture, defined, shared, beliefs, preferences, respective, groups, programmatic, . For an alternate standard usage of cultural economics see Economics of the arts and literature Cultural economics is the branch of economics that studies the relation of culture to economic outcomes Here culture is defined by shared beliefs and preferences of respective groups Programmatic issues include whether and how much culture matters as to economic outcomes and what its relation is to institutions 1 As a growing field in behavioral economics the role of culture in economic behavior is increasingly being demonstrated to cause significant differentials in decision making and the management and valuation of assets Overview EditApplications include the study of religion 2 social capital 3 social norms 4 social identity 5 fertility 6 beliefs in redistributive justice 7 ideology 8 hatred 9 terrorism 10 trust 11 family ties 12 long term orientation 13 14 and the culture of economics 15 16 A general analytical theme is how ideas and behaviors are spread among individuals through the formation of social capital 17 social networks 18 and processes such as social learning as in the theory of social evolution 19 and information cascades 20 Methods include case studies and theoretical and empirical modeling of cultural transmission within and across social groups 21 In 2013 Said E Dawlabani added the value systems approach to the cultural emergence aspect of macroeconomics 22 Development EditCultural economics develops from how wants and tastes are formed in society This is partly due to nurture aspects or what type of environment one is raised in as it is the internalization of one s upbringing that shapes their future wants and tastes 23 Acquired tastes can be thought of as an example of this as they demonstrate how preferences can be shaped socially 24 A key thought area that separates the development of cultural economics from traditional economics is a difference in how individuals arrive at their decisions While a traditional economist will view decision making as having both implicit and explicit consequences a cultural economist would argue that an individual will not only arrive at their decision based on these implicit and explicit decisions but based on trajectories These trajectories consist of regularities which have been built up throughout the years and guide individuals in their decision making process 25 Combining value systems and systems thinking Edit Economists have also started to look at cultural economics with a systems thinking approach In this approach the economy and culture are each viewed as a single system where interaction and feedback effects were acknowledged and where in particular the dynamic were made explicit 26 In this sense the interdependencies of culture and the economy can be combined and better understood by following this approach Said E Dawlabani s book MEMEnomics The Next Generation Economic System 22 combines the ideas of value systems see value ethics and systems thinking to provide one of the first frameworks that explores the effect of economic policies on culture The book explores the intersections of multiple disciplines such as cultural development organizational behavior and memetics all in an attempt to explore the roots of cultural economics 27 Growth EditThe advancing pace of new technology is transforming how the public consumes and shares culture The cultural economic field has seen great growth with the advent of online social networking which has created productivity improvements in how culture is consumed New technologies have also led to cultural convergence where all kinds of culture can be accessed on a single device Throughout their upbringing younger persons of the current generation are consuming culture faster than their parents ever did and through new mediums The smartphone is a blossoming example of this where books music talk artwork and more can all be accessed on a single device in a matter of seconds 28 This medium and the culture surrounding it is beginning to have an effect on the economy whether it be increasing communication while lowering costs lowering the barriers of entry to the technology economy or making use of excess capacity 29 An example of culture being consumed via smartphone This field has also seen growth through the advent of new economic studies that have put on a cultural lens For example Kafka and Kostis 2021 at a recent study published in the Journal of Comparative Economics use an unbalanced panel dataset comprised from 34 OECD countries from 1981 to 2019 conclude that the cultural background during the overall period under consideration is characterized as post materialistic and harms economic growth Moreover they highlight both theoretically and empirically the cultural backlash hypothesis since the cultural background of the countries under analysis presents a shift from traditional materialistic from 1981 up to 1998 to post materialist values from 1999 up to 2019 Doing so they conclude on a positive effect of cultural background on economic growth when traditional materialistic values prevail and a negative effect when post materialistic values prevail These results highlight culture as a crucial factor for economic growth and indicate that economic policy makers should take it seriously into account before designing economic policy and in order to explain the effectiveness of economic policies implemented Another study on Europeans living with their families into adulthood was conducted by Paola Giuliano a professor at UCLA The study found that those of Southern European descent tend to live at home with their families longer than those of Northern European descent Giuliano added cultural critique to her analysis of the research revealing that it is Southern European culture to stay at home longer and then related this to how those who live at home longer have fewer children and start families later thus contributing to Europe s falling birthrates 30 Giuliano s work is an example of how the growth of cultural economics is beginning to spread across the field 31 Sustainable development EditMain article Sustainable development An area that cultural economics has a strong presence in is sustainable development Sustainable development has been defined as development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs 32 Culture plays an important role in this as it can determine how people view preparing for these future generations Delayed gratification is a cultural economic issue that developed countries are currently dealing with Economists argue that to ensure that the future is better than today certain measures must be taken such as collecting taxes or going green to protect the environment Policies such as these are hard for today s politicians to promote who want to win the vote of today s voters who are concerned with the present and not the future People want to see the benefits now not in the future 33 Economist David Throsby has proposed the idea of culturally sustainable development which compasses both the cultural industries such as the arts and culture in the societal sense He has created a set of criteria in regards to for which policy prescriptions can be compared to in order to ensure growth for future generations The criteria are as follows 34 Advancement of material and non material well being implies balance amongst economic social and cultural forces Intergenerational equity and the maintenance of cultural capital current generation must recognize their responsibility to future generations Equity within the present generation distribution of cultural resources must be fair Recognition of interdependence policy must understand the connections between economic cultural and other variables within an overall system With these guidelines Throsby hopes to spur the recognition between culture and economics which is something he believes has been lacking from popular economic discussions Cultural finance EditCultural finance a growing field in behavioral economics that studies the impact of cultural differences on individual financial decisions and on financial markets Probably the first paper in this area was The Role of Social Capital in Financial Development by Luigi Guiso Paola Sapienza and Luigi Zingales 35 The paper studied how well known differences in social capital affected the use and availability of financial contracts across different parts of Italy In areas of the country with high levels of social capital households invest less in cash and more in stock use more checks have higher access to institutional credit and make less use of informal credit Few years later the same authors published another paper Trusting the Stock Market where they show that a general lack of trust can limit stock market participation Since trust has a strong cultural component these two papers represent important contribution in cultural economics In 2007 Thorsten Hens and Mei Wang pointed out that indeed many areas of finance are influenced by cultural differences 36 The role of culture in financial behavior is also increasingly being demonstrated to have highly significant effects on the management and valuation of assets Using the dimensions of culture identified by Shalom Schwartz it has been proved that corporate dividend payments are determined largely by the dimensions of Mastery and Conservatism 37 Specifically higher degrees of conservatism are associated with greater volumes and values of dividend payments and higher degrees of mastery are associated with the total opposite The effect of culture on dividend payouts has been further shown to be closely related to cultural differences in risk and time preferences 38 A different study assessed the role of culture on earnings management using Geert Hofstede s cultural dimensions and the index of earnings management developed by Christian Leutz which includes the use of accrual alteration to reduce volatility in reported earnings the use of accrual alteration to reduce volatility in reported operating cash flows use of accounting discretion to mitigate the reporting of small losses and the use of accounting discretion when reporting operating earnings It was found that Hofstede s dimension of Individualism was negatively correlated with earnings management and that uncertainty avoidance was positively correlated 39 Behavioral economist Michael Taillard demonstrated that investment behaviors are caused primarily by behavioral factors largely attributed to the influence of culture on the psychological frame of the investors in different nations rather than rational ones by comparing the cultural dimensions used both by Geert Hofstede and Robert House identifying strong and specific influences in risk aversion behavior resulting from the overlapping cultural dimensions between them that remained constant over a 20 year period 40 In regards to investing it has been confirmed by multiple studies that greater differences between the cultures of various nations reduces the amount of investment between those countries It was proven that both cultural differences between nations as well as the amount of unfamiliarity investors have with a culture not their own greatly reduces their willingness to invest in those nations and that these factors have a negative impact with future returns resulting in a cost premium on the degree of foreignness of an investment 41 42 Despite this equity markets continue to integrate as indicated by equity price comovements of which the two largest contributing factors are the ratio of trade between nations and the ratio of GDP resulting from foreign direct investment 43 Even these factors are the result of behavioral sources however 44 The UN World Investment Report 2013 45 shows that regional integration is occurring at a more rapid rate than distant foreign relations confirming an earlier study concluding that nations closer to each other tend to be more integrated 46 Since increased cultural distance reduces the amount of foreign direct investment this results in an accelerating curvilinear correlation between financial behavior and cultural distance 47 48 49 Culture also influences which factors are useful when predicting stock valuations In Jordan it was found that 84 of variability in stock returns were accounted for by using money supply interest rate term structure industry productivity growth and risk premium but were not influenced at all by inflation rates or dividend yield 50 In Nigeria both real GDP and Consumer Price Index were both useful predictive factors but foreign exchange rate was not citation needed In Zimbabwe only money supply and oil prices were found to be useful predictors of stock market valuations 51 India identified exchange rate wholesale price index gold prices and market index as being useful factors 52 A comprehensive global study out of Romania attempted to identify if any factors of stock market valuation were culturally universal identifying interest rates inflation and industrial production but found that exchange rate currency exchange volume and trade were all unique to Romania 53 Geographical origins of cultural traits EditGeographical characteristics were linked recently to the emergence of cultural traits and differences in the intensity of these cultural traits across regions countries and ethnic group Geographical characteristics that were favorable for the usage of the plow in agriculture contributed to a gender gap in productivity and to the emergence of gender roles in society 54 55 56 Agricultural characteristics that led to a higher return to agricultural investment generated a process of selection adaptation and learning that increase the level of long term orientation in society 13 See also EditBehavioral economics Cultural anthropology Cultural cognition Cultural geography Cultural policy Economic anthropology Economic imperialism economics Economic sociology Economics of the arts and literature Evolutionary economics Information economics Memetics Organizational behavior Social economics Sustainable developmentNotes Edit Press button or ctrl for small font links below Luigi Guiso Paola Sapienza and Luigi Zingales 2006 Does Culture Affect Economic Outcomes Journal of Economic Perspectives 20 2 pp 23 48 Mark Casson 2006 Culture and Economic Performance Handbook of the Economics of Art and Culture V 1 Chap 12 pp 359 97 doi https doi org 10 1016 2FS1574 0676 2806 2901012 X 10 1016 S1574 0676 06 01012 X Paul Streeten 2006 Culture and Economic Development V 1 Chap 13 pp 399 412 doi 10 1016 S1574 0676 06 01013 1 Jeanette D Snowball 2008 Measuring the Value of Culture Springer Description and Arrow page searchable chapter links Joseph Henrich et al 2005 Economic Man in Cross Cultural Perspective Behavioral Experiments in 15 Small scale Societies Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 6 pp 795 815 doi 10 1017 S0140525X05000142 Samuel Bowles 1998 Endogenous Preferences The Cultural Consequences of Markets and Other Economic Institutions Journal of Economic Literature 36 1 pp 75 111 JSTOR 2564952 Guido Tabellini 2008 Institutions and Culture Journal of the European Economic Association 6 2 3 2008 pp 255 94 doi 10 1162 JEEA 2008 6 2 3 255 Raquel Fernandez 2016 Culture and Economics The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Laurence R Iannaccone 1998 Introduction to the Economics of Religion Journal of Economic Literature 36 3 pp 1465 95 Luigi Guiso Paola Sapienza Luigi Zingales 2003 People s Opium Religion and Economic Attitudes Journal of Monetary Economics January 2003 https doi org 10 1016 S0304 3932 02 00202 7 Laurence R Iannaccone and Eli Berman 2008 religion economics of The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Abstract Guiso Luigi Sapienza Paola Zingales Luigi February 2002 The Role of Social Capital in Financial Development NBER doi 10 3386 w7563 H Peyton Young 2008 social norms The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Abstract Kenneth G Binmore and Larry Samuelson 1994 An Economist s Perspective on the Evolution of Norms Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics 150 1 pp 45 63 Abstract Archived 2014 11 09 at the Wayback Machine Richard A Posner 1997 Social Norms and the Law An Economic Approach American Economic Review 87 2 p 365 69 JSTOR 2950947 Gary S Becker and Kevin M Murphy 2001 Social Economics Market Behavior in a Social Environment ch 10 The Formation of Norms and Values Description and table of contents Harvard University Press Jess Benhabib Alberto Bisin and Matthew Jackson ed 2011 Handbook of Social Economics Elsevier Vol 1A Part 1 Social Preferences ch 1 11 Part 2 Social Actions ch 12 17 Description amp Contents links Archived 2012 01 05 at the Wayback Machine and chapter preview links Arthur J Robson 2008 group selection The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Abstract George A Akerlof and Rachel E Kranton 2000 Economics and Identity Quarterly Journal of Economics 115 3 pp 715 53 doi 10 1162 003355300554881 2005 Identity and the Economics of Organizations Journal of Economic Perspectives 19 1 pp 9 32 doi 10 1257 0895330053147930 2010 Identity Economics How Our Identities Shape Our Work Wages and Well Being Princeton University Press Description amp TOC Introduction pp 3 8 and preview Raquel Fernandez and Alessandra Fogli 2006 Fertility The Role of Culture and Family Experience Journal of the European Economic Association 4 2 3 pp 552 61 JSTOR 40005121 Roland Benabou and Jean Tirole 2006 Belief in a Just World and Redistributive Politics Quarterly Journal of Economics 121 2 pp 699 746 doi 10 1162 qjec 2006 121 2 699 Roland Benabou 2008 Ideology Journal of the European Economic Association 6 2 3 pp 321 52 doi 10 1162 JEEA 2008 6 2 3 321 Joseph P Kalt and Mark A Zupan 1984 Capture and Ideology in the Economic Theory of Politics American Economic Review 74 3 p 279 300 JSTOR 1804008 Reprinted in C Grafton and A Permaloff ed 2005 The Behavioral Study of Political Ideology and Public Policy Formation ch 4 pp 65 104 Bisin Alberto Verdier Thierry March 2000 A model of cultural transmission voting and political ideology European Journal of Political Economy 16 1 5 29 doi 10 1016 S0176 2680 99 00045 2 D Andrew Austin and Nathaniel T Wilcox 2007 Believing in Economic Theories Sex Lies Evidence Trust and Ideology Economic Inquiry 45 3 pp 502 18 doi 10 1111 j 1465 7295 2006 00042 x Timur Kuran 1995 Private Truths Public Lies The Social Consequences of Preference Falsification Harvard University Press Description and scroll to chapter preview links Edward L Glaeser 2005 The Political Economy of Hatred Quarterly Journal of Economics 120 1 pp 45 86 doi 10 1162 0033553053327434 S Brock Blomberg and Gregory D Hess 2008 terrorism economics of The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Abstract Alan B Krueger 2008 What Makes a Terrorist Economics and the Roots of Terrorism Princeton Description Archived 2011 10 09 at the Wayback Machine Introduction and ch 1 preview Joyce Berg John Dickhaut and Kevin McCabe 1995 Trust Reciprocity and Social History Games and Economic Behavior 10 1 pp 122 42 doi 10 1006 game 1995 1027 Raymond Fisman and Tarun Khanna 1999 Is Trust a Historical Residue Information Flows and Trust Levels Journal of Economic Behavior amp Organization 38 1 pp 79 92 doi 10 1016 S0167 2681 98 00123 1 Nava Ashraf Iris Bohnet and Nikita Piankov 2006 Decomposing Trust and Trustworthiness Experimental Economics 9 3 pp 193 208 doi 10 1007 s10683 006 9122 4 Paul J Zak and Stephen Knack 2001 Trust and Growth Economic Journal 111 470 p p 295 321 Patrick Francois and Jan Zabojnik 2005 Trust Social Capital and Economic Development Journal of the European Economic Association 3 1 p p 51 94 Sjoerd Beugelsdijk 2006 A Note on the Theory and Measurement of Trust in Explaining Differences in Economic Growth Cambridge Journal of Economics 30 3 pp 371 87 doi 10 1093 cje bei064 Swee Hoon Chuah et al 2007 Do Cultures Clash Evidence from Cross national Ultimatum Game Experiments Journal of Economic Behavior amp Organization 64 1 pp 35 48 doi 10 1016 j jebo 2006 04 006 Alesina Alberto Giuliano Paola 2010 The power of the family Journal of Economic Growth 15 2 93 125 doi 10 1007 s10887 010 9052 z a b Galor Oded Ozak Omer 2016 The Agricultural Origins of Time Preference American Economic Review 106 10 3064 3103 doi 10 1257 aer 20150020 PMC 5541952 PMID 28781375 Hofstede Geert 2001 Culture s consequences Comparing values behaviors institutions and organizations across nations Sage publications Melvin W Reder 1999 Economics The Culture of a Controversial Science Description permanent dead link and chapter links Joseph J Spengler 1970 Notes on the International Transmission of Economic Ideas History of Political Economy 2 1 p p 133 51 Yuval Yonay and Daniel Breslau 2006 Marketing Models The Culture of Mathematical Economics Sociological Forum 21 3 p p 345 86 HTMl permanent dead link As at Journal of Economic Literature category JEL Z1 Cultural Economics Partha Dasgupta 2008 social capital The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Abstract Joel Sobel 2002 Can We Trust Social Capital Journal of Economic Literature 40 1 pp 139 54 close Bookmarks tab James Moody and Martina Morris social networks economic relevance of The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Abstract Paul Seabright 2008 hunters gatherers cities and evolution The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Abstract Alberto Bisin and Thierry Verdier 2008 cultural transmission The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Abstract Joel M Guttman 2003 Repeated Interaction and the Evolution of Preferences for Reciprocity Economic Journal 113 489 p p 631 56 Alberto Bisin et al 2004 Cooperation as a Transmitted Cultural Trait Rationality and Society 16 4 477 507 Abstract Oded Galor and Omer Moav 2002 Natural Selection and the Origin of Economic Growth The Quarterly Journal of Economics 117 4 1133 1191 Sushil Bikhchandani David Hirshleifer and Ivo Welch 1992 A Theory of Fads Fashion Custom and Cultural Change as Informational Cascades Journal of Political Economy 100 5 pp 992 1026 Archived 2011 07 13 at the Wayback Machine Sushil Bikhchandani David Hirshleifer and Ivo Welch 1998 Learning from the Behavior of Others Conformity Fads and Informational Cascades Journal of Economic Perspectives 12 3 pp 151 70 Archived 2011 08 15 at the Wayback Machine Sushil Bikhchandani David Hirshleifer and Ivo Welch 2008 information cascades The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Abstract Archived 2013 01 21 at archive today Alberto Bisin and Thierry Verdier 2008 cultural transmission The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Abstract Rob Boyd 2008 cross cultural experiments The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Abstract Jose A Scheinkman 2008 social interactions theory The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics 2nd Edition Abstract Charles F Manski 2000 Economic Analysis of Social Interactions Journal of Economic Perspectives 14 3 pp 115 36 here or here or with linked citations Archived 2011 08 14 at the Wayback Machine Edward P Lazear 1999 Culture and Language Journal of Political Economy 107 6 Part 2 pp S95 S126 doi 10 1086 250105 Oded Galor and Omer Moav 2002 Natural Selection and the Origin of Economic Growth The Quarterly Journal of Economics 117 4 pp 1133 1191 Enrico Spolaore and Romain Wacziarg 2013 How deep are the roots of economic development Journal of Economic Literature 51 2 pp 325 369 Oded Galor and Omer Ozak 2016 The Agricultural Origins of Time Preference American Economic Review 106 10 pp 3064 3103 a b Said Elias Dawlabani MEMEnomics The Next Generation Economic System ISBN 978 1590799963 Stretton Hugh 1999 Economics Pluto Press pp 247 55 Hutter Michael 1996 The Impact of Cultural Economics on Economic Theory Journal of Cultural Economics 20 4 263 68 doi 10 1007 s10824 005 3268 3 S2CID 154123858 Weber Roberto Dawes Robyn 2005 The Handbook of Economic Sociology Second Edition Princeton University Press p 101 Throsby David 1995 Culture Economics and Sustainability Journal of Cultural Economics 19 3 199 216 doi 10 1007 BF01074049 S2CID 153506567 What is Memenomics The MEMEnomics Group Uncovering the values of a sustainable future www memenomics com Retrieved 2017 03 05 Cowen Tyler 2008 Why everything has changed the recent revolution in cultural economics Journal of Cultural Economics 32 4 261 73 doi 10 1007 s10824 008 9074 y S2CID 153873811 kayla mcphail 2016 03 04 How the Smartphone has Impacted Economic Development The University of Scranton Online Retrieved 2017 03 27 Europe needs many more babies to avert a population disaster The Guardian 23 August 2015 Retrieved 4 March 2017 Is Economic Growth a Question of Culture Kellogg Insight 2014 09 02 Retrieved 2017 03 04 Sustainable Development International Institute for Sustainable Development Retrieved March 4 2017 Galston William 2014 Economics and Culture in Market Democracies The New Challenge to Market Democracies Brookings Institution Press pp 14 18 Throsby David 1995 Culture economics and sustainability Journal of Cultural Economics 19 3 199 206 doi 10 1007 BF01074049 S2CID 153506567 The Role of Social Capital in Financial Development Luigi Guiso Paola Sapienza Luigi Zingales The American Economic Review Vol 94 No 3 Jun 2004 pp 526 556 Hens T Wang M 2007 Does Finance have a Cultural Dimension NCCR Finrisk 377 Shao L Kwok C Guedhami O 2010 National culture and dividend policy Journal of International Business Studies 41 8 1391 1414 doi 10 1057 jibs 2009 74 S2CID 154503614 Breuer W Rieger M Soypak C 2014 The Behavioral Foundations of Corporate Dividend Policy Journal of Banking and Finance 42 247 256 doi 10 1016 j jbankfin 2014 02 001 Callen L Morel M Richardson G 2011 Do culture and religion mitigate earnings management Evidence from a cross country analysis Journal of Disclosure and Governance 8 2 103 21 doi 10 1057 jdg 2010 31 S2CID 205122539 Taillard Michael 2017 Cultural Influences of Investing Behavior A Correlational Design Study ProQuest Xu Y Hu S Fan X 2009 The impacts of country risk and cultural distance on transnational equity investments Chinese Management Studies 3 3 235 48 doi 10 1108 17506140910984087 Baik B Kang J Kim J Lee J 2012 The liability of foreignness in international equity investments Evidence from the US stock market Journal of International Business Studies 43 107 22 Shi J Bilson C Powell J Wigg J 2010 Foreign Direct Investment and International Stock Market Integration Australian Journal of Management 35 3 265 doi 10 1177 0312896210384680 S2CID 154042909 Xu Y Hu S Fan X 2009 The impacts of country risk and cultural distance on transnational equity investments Chinese Management Studies 3 3 235 48 doi 10 1108 17506140910984087 UN World Investment Report 2013 Kivilcim Y Muradoglu S 2001 The impacts of country risk and cultural distance on transnational equity investments Chinese Management Studies 3 3 235 48 doi 10 1108 17506140910984087 Baik B Kang J Kim J Lee J 2012 The liability of foreignness in international equity investments Evidence from the US stock market Journal of International Business Studies 43 107 22 Xu Y Hu S Fan X 2009 The impacts of country risk and cultural distance on transnational equity investments Chinese Management Studies 3 3 235 48 doi 10 1108 17506140910984087 Christelis D Georgarakos D 2013 Investing at Home and Abroad Different Costs Different People PDF Journal of Banking and Finance 37 6 2069 86 doi 10 1016 j jbankfin 2013 01 019 Ramadan Z 2012 The Validity of the Arbitrage Pricing Theory in the Jordanian Stock Market International Journal of Economics and Finance 4 5 177 doi 10 5539 ijef v4n5p177 Jecheche P 2012 An empirical investigation of Arbitrage Pricing Theory A case Zimbabwe Research in Business amp Economics Journal 6 1 1 Basu D Chawla D 2012 An Empirical Test of the Arbitrage Pricing Theory The Case of Indian Stock Market Global Business Review 13 3 421 32 doi 10 1177 097215091201300305 S2CID 154470693 GeambaSu C Jianu I Herteliu C GeambaSu L 2014 Macroeconomic Influence on Shares Return Study Case Arbitrage Pricing Theory APT Applied on Bucharest Stock Exchange Economic Computation and Economic Cybernetics Studies and Research 48 2 133 50 Boserup Ester 1970 Woman s role in economic development Routledge Pryor Frederic L 1985 The invention of the plow Comparative Studies in Society and History 27 4 727 743 doi 10 1017 S0010417500011749 S2CID 144840498 Alesina Alberto Giuliano Paola Nunn Nathan 2013 On the origins of gender roles Women and the plough The Quarterly Journal of Economics 128 2 469 530 doi 10 1093 qje qjt005 hdl 10419 51568 Journals EditEconomic Development and Cultural Change Journal of Cultural Economics Description scope and links to volume contents Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cultural economics amp oldid 1121430992, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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