Connecting perceived economic threat and prosocial tendencies: The explanatory role of empathic concern
Metadatos
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Alonso Ferres, María; Garrido Macías, Marta; Moreno Bella, Eva; Valor Segura, Inmaculada; Navarro Carrillo, GinésEditorial
Public Library of Science
Fecha
2020-05Referencia bibliográfica
Alonso-Ferres M, Navarro-Carrillo G, Garrido-Macı´as M, Moreno-Bella E, Valor-Segura I (2020) Connecting perceived economic threat and prosocial tendencies: The explanatory role of empathic concern. PLoS ONE 15(5): e0232608. [https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0232608]
Patrocinador
This research was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (Ref. PSI2014-59659-R and Ref. PSI2017-83966- R [MINECO/AEI/FEDER/UE]). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Resumen
Recent research suggests that perceived economic threat constitutes a valid predictor of people’s attitudes and behaviors. While accumulated empirical evidence has mostly underlined
the deleterious psychological effects (e.g., reduced psychological well-being) of perceived
economic threat in times of economic strain, we postulate that individuals experiencing higher
economic threat linked to the Spanish economic crisis are more prone to engage in other-beneficial prosocial behavior. Across two independently collected community samples, we tested
this theoretical formulation and examined the potential mediating roles of empathic concern
(Studies 1 & 2) and identification (Study 2). Study 1 (N = 306) revealed that participants who
descended in the social scale due to the negative national economic context were engaged in
a larger number of helping behaviors over the last three months compared to participants who
did not descend the social ladder—independently of several sociodemographic and ideological factors. Moreover, our data indicated these effects were driven by increased empathic
concern. Study 2 (N = 588), in which two hypothetical helping-behavior scenarios were randomly administered (crisis-related vs. control), showed that participants under high perceived
financial threat exhibited an undifferentiated pattern of prosociality. However, moderatedmediation analyses indicated that empathic concern explained the perceived financial threathelping behavior link in the hypothetical crisis-related scenario but not in the hypothetical control scenario. Together, these findings extend prior literature on the psychosocial effects of
perceived economic threat and the determinants of other-oriented behavior. Implications of
these findings and suggestions for further research are discussed.