Cooperation and Trust Across Societies During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Open Access
Authors
  • A. Romano
  • G. Spadaro
  • D. Balliet
  • J. Joireman
  • C. Van Lissa
  • S. Jin
  • M. Agostini
  • J.J. Bélanger
  • B. Gützkow
  • J. Kreienkamp
  • PsyCorona Collaboration
  • N.P. Leander
  • G. Abakoumkin
  • A.W. Kruglanski
  • B.M. Schumpe ORCID logo
Publication date 2021
Journal Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Volume | Issue number 52 | 7
Pages (from-to) 622-642
Number of pages 21
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract

Cross-societal differences in cooperation and trust among strangers in the provision of public goods may be key to understanding how societies are managing the COVID-19 pandemic. We report a survey conducted across 41 societies between March and May 2020 (N = 34,526), and test pre-registered hypotheses about how cross-societal differences in cooperation and trust relate to prosocial COVID-19 responses (e.g., social distancing), stringency of policies, and support for behavioral regulations (e.g., mandatory quarantine). We further tested whether cross-societal variation in institutions and ecologies theorized to impact cooperation were associated with prosocial COVID-19 responses, including institutional quality, religiosity, and historical prevalence of pathogens. We found substantial variation across societies in prosocial COVID-19 responses, stringency of policies, and support for behavioral regulations. However, we found no consistent evidence to support the idea that cross-societal variation in cooperation and trust among strangers is associated with these outcomes related to the COVID-19 pandemic. These results were replicated with another independent cross-cultural COVID-19 dataset (N = 112,136), and in both snowball and representative samples. We discuss implications of our results, including challenging the assumption that managing the COVID-19 pandemic across societies is best modeled as a public goods dilemma.

Document type Article
Note With supplementary file
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1177/0022022120988913
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85104502692
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0022022120988913 (Final published version)
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