Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
881848 Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We explore the correlation between cooperativeness and competitiveness.•We investigate a sample of children aged 9–12 years in Colombia and Sweden.•Competitiveness is studied with two measures and four tasks.•We find no consistent relationship between cooperativeness and competitiveness.•For competitiveness in math there is evidence of a negative relationship.

Cooperation and competition are both essential elements of economic life. Here we explore how cooperativeness in a prisoner's dilemma correlates with competitiveness in a sample of 9–12 years old children in Colombia and Sweden. Using two different measures and four different tasks for competitiveness, we find no consistent relationship between cooperativeness and competitiveness. However, we find evidence of a negative relationship between willingness to compete in a math task and cooperativeness in the overall sample. Competitiveness in math has previously been related to educational choices, and may therefore be the most economically relevant relationship.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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