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High stakes: A little more cheating, a lot less charity

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posted on 2025-07-31, 21:57 authored by Z Rahwan, OP Hauser, E Kochanowska, B Fasolo
We explore the downstream consequences of cheating–and resisting the temptation to cheat–at high stakes on pro-social behaviour and self-perceptions. In a large online sample, we replicate the seminal finding that cheating rates are largely insensitive to stake size, even at a 500-fold increase. We present two new findings. First, resisting the temptation to cheat at high stakes led to negative moral spill-over, triggering a moral license: participants who resisted cheating in the high stakes condition subsequently donated a smaller fraction of their earnings to charity. Second, participants who cheated maximally mispredicted their perceived morality: although such participants thought they were less prone to feeling immoral if they cheated, they ended up feeling more immoral a day after the cheating task than immediately afterwards. We discuss the theoretical implications of our findings on moral balancing and self-deception, and the practical relevance for organisational design.

Funding

We are grateful to a grant from Google ATAP that funded this research.

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© 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record.

Journal

Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

en

Citation

Available online 11 June 2018

Department

  • Economics

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