Making Up People : The Effect of Identity on Preferences and Performance in a Modernizing Society

It is typically assumed that being hard-working or clever is a trait of the person, in the sense that it is always there, in a fixed manner. However, in an experiment with almost 600 boys in India, cues to one's place in the traditional caste...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hoff, Karla, Pandey, Priyanka
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/10/16816808/making-up-people-effect-identity-preferences-performance-modernizing-society
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12068
id okr-10986-12068
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-120682021-04-23T14:02:59Z Making Up People : The Effect of Identity on Preferences and Performance in a Modernizing Society Hoff, Karla Pandey, Priyanka ACHIEVEMENT AMBITION ANALOGY ANTHROPOLOGY APTITUDE TESTS ARGUMENTS ASIAN-AMERICAN ASIAN-AMERICANS ATROCITIES ATTENTION BELIEF SYSTEMS BELIEFS BLACK BOUNDARIES BOUNDARY BRAIN CASTE SYSTEM CASTES CHILDHOOD COGNITION COGNITIVE PERFORMANCE COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY COMPETITORS CONFORMITY CONSCIOUSNESS CREATION DATA COLLECTION DISCRIMINATION DISCUSSION DISCUSSIONS DOMAINS DOMINANT GROUP DRAWING EARLY CHILDHOOD ECONOMIC DISCRIMINATION ECONOMIC INQUIRY EMOTIONS EQUALITY ESSAY ETIQUETTE FEELINGS GENDER GENDER DIFFERENCES GROUP MEMBERSHIP HUMAN CAPITAL IDEA IDEAS IDENTITIES IDENTITY IMMIGRANTS INDIVIDUAL CHARACTERISTICS INDIVIDUALITY INHIBITION INTELLIGENCE LEARNING LIFE CHANCES LITERATURE LOVE MOBILITY NORMS PARENTS PERSONALITY PLAYS POPULAR CULTURE POWER PREJUDICE PRIMING PRODUCTIVITY PSYCHOLOGY PUBLIC SERVICES RACE RECALL RITUALS SCRIPT SEGREGATION SELF-CONCEPT SELF-CONFIDENCE SOCIAL CATEGORIES SOCIAL CATEGORY SOCIAL CHANGE SOCIAL CLASS SOCIAL GROUP SOCIAL IDENTITIES SOCIAL IDENTITY SOCIAL ORDER SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY SOCIAL SCIENCES SOCIETIES SOCIOLOGY SYMBOLS TELEVISION TRAITS VIOLENCE WORKING MEMORY It is typically assumed that being hard-working or clever is a trait of the person, in the sense that it is always there, in a fixed manner. However, in an experiment with almost 600 boys in India, cues to one's place in the traditional caste order turn out to influence the expression of these traits. The experiment assigned students to different treatments with respect to the salience of caste and had them solve mazes under incentives. It turned out that making caste salient can reduce output by about 25 percent, which is equivalent to twice the effect on output of being one year younger. The channels through which this occurs differ by caste status. For the upper castes, the decline in performance under piece rates can only be explained by a shift in preferences regarding the provision of effort. When the ascriptive caste order is cued, upper-caste individuals may think, "I don't need to excel." In contrast, for the lower castes, which were traditionally "untouchables," publicly revealing caste identity impairs the ability to learn and may lead individuals to think, "I can't (or don't dare to) excel." This paper provides a measure of the impact that ascriptive, hierarchized identities can have on preferences and performance after a society -- in its public pronouncements and legislation -- has adopted norms of equality in a formal sense. The findings are important because they suggest that when contexts cue identities founded on the superseded rules of a hierarchical institution, the effects on human capital formation and development can be first-order. Contexts that make traditional identities salient are an underemphasized source of impediments to institutional change. 2013-01-03T18:26:46Z 2013-01-03T18:26:46Z 2012-10 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/10/16816808/making-up-people-effect-identity-preferences-performance-modernizing-society http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12068 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper; No. 6223 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research South Asia India
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACHIEVEMENT
AMBITION
ANALOGY
ANTHROPOLOGY
APTITUDE TESTS
ARGUMENTS
ASIAN-AMERICAN
ASIAN-AMERICANS
ATROCITIES
ATTENTION
BELIEF SYSTEMS
BELIEFS
BLACK
BOUNDARIES
BOUNDARY
BRAIN
CASTE SYSTEM
CASTES
CHILDHOOD
COGNITION
COGNITIVE PERFORMANCE
COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY
COMPETITORS
CONFORMITY
CONSCIOUSNESS
CREATION
DATA COLLECTION
DISCRIMINATION
DISCUSSION
DISCUSSIONS
DOMAINS
DOMINANT GROUP
DRAWING
EARLY CHILDHOOD
ECONOMIC DISCRIMINATION
ECONOMIC INQUIRY
EMOTIONS
EQUALITY
ESSAY
ETIQUETTE
FEELINGS
GENDER
GENDER DIFFERENCES
GROUP MEMBERSHIP
HUMAN CAPITAL
IDEA
IDEAS
IDENTITIES
IDENTITY
IMMIGRANTS
INDIVIDUAL CHARACTERISTICS
INDIVIDUALITY
INHIBITION
INTELLIGENCE
LEARNING
LIFE CHANCES
LITERATURE
LOVE
MOBILITY
NORMS
PARENTS
PERSONALITY
PLAYS
POPULAR CULTURE
POWER
PREJUDICE
PRIMING
PRODUCTIVITY
PSYCHOLOGY
PUBLIC SERVICES
RACE
RECALL
RITUALS
SCRIPT
SEGREGATION
SELF-CONCEPT
SELF-CONFIDENCE
SOCIAL CATEGORIES
SOCIAL CATEGORY
SOCIAL CHANGE
SOCIAL CLASS
SOCIAL GROUP
SOCIAL IDENTITIES
SOCIAL IDENTITY
SOCIAL ORDER
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
SOCIAL SCIENCES
SOCIETIES
SOCIOLOGY
SYMBOLS
TELEVISION
TRAITS
VIOLENCE
WORKING MEMORY
spellingShingle ACHIEVEMENT
AMBITION
ANALOGY
ANTHROPOLOGY
APTITUDE TESTS
ARGUMENTS
ASIAN-AMERICAN
ASIAN-AMERICANS
ATROCITIES
ATTENTION
BELIEF SYSTEMS
BELIEFS
BLACK
BOUNDARIES
BOUNDARY
BRAIN
CASTE SYSTEM
CASTES
CHILDHOOD
COGNITION
COGNITIVE PERFORMANCE
COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY
COMPETITORS
CONFORMITY
CONSCIOUSNESS
CREATION
DATA COLLECTION
DISCRIMINATION
DISCUSSION
DISCUSSIONS
DOMAINS
DOMINANT GROUP
DRAWING
EARLY CHILDHOOD
ECONOMIC DISCRIMINATION
ECONOMIC INQUIRY
EMOTIONS
EQUALITY
ESSAY
ETIQUETTE
FEELINGS
GENDER
GENDER DIFFERENCES
GROUP MEMBERSHIP
HUMAN CAPITAL
IDEA
IDEAS
IDENTITIES
IDENTITY
IMMIGRANTS
INDIVIDUAL CHARACTERISTICS
INDIVIDUALITY
INHIBITION
INTELLIGENCE
LEARNING
LIFE CHANCES
LITERATURE
LOVE
MOBILITY
NORMS
PARENTS
PERSONALITY
PLAYS
POPULAR CULTURE
POWER
PREJUDICE
PRIMING
PRODUCTIVITY
PSYCHOLOGY
PUBLIC SERVICES
RACE
RECALL
RITUALS
SCRIPT
SEGREGATION
SELF-CONCEPT
SELF-CONFIDENCE
SOCIAL CATEGORIES
SOCIAL CATEGORY
SOCIAL CHANGE
SOCIAL CLASS
SOCIAL GROUP
SOCIAL IDENTITIES
SOCIAL IDENTITY
SOCIAL ORDER
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
SOCIAL SCIENCES
SOCIETIES
SOCIOLOGY
SYMBOLS
TELEVISION
TRAITS
VIOLENCE
WORKING MEMORY
Hoff, Karla
Pandey, Priyanka
Making Up People : The Effect of Identity on Preferences and Performance in a Modernizing Society
geographic_facet South Asia
India
relation Policy Research Working Paper; No. 6223
description It is typically assumed that being hard-working or clever is a trait of the person, in the sense that it is always there, in a fixed manner. However, in an experiment with almost 600 boys in India, cues to one's place in the traditional caste order turn out to influence the expression of these traits. The experiment assigned students to different treatments with respect to the salience of caste and had them solve mazes under incentives. It turned out that making caste salient can reduce output by about 25 percent, which is equivalent to twice the effect on output of being one year younger. The channels through which this occurs differ by caste status. For the upper castes, the decline in performance under piece rates can only be explained by a shift in preferences regarding the provision of effort. When the ascriptive caste order is cued, upper-caste individuals may think, "I don't need to excel." In contrast, for the lower castes, which were traditionally "untouchables," publicly revealing caste identity impairs the ability to learn and may lead individuals to think, "I can't (or don't dare to) excel." This paper provides a measure of the impact that ascriptive, hierarchized identities can have on preferences and performance after a society -- in its public pronouncements and legislation -- has adopted norms of equality in a formal sense. The findings are important because they suggest that when contexts cue identities founded on the superseded rules of a hierarchical institution, the effects on human capital formation and development can be first-order. Contexts that make traditional identities salient are an underemphasized source of impediments to institutional change.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Hoff, Karla
Pandey, Priyanka
author_facet Hoff, Karla
Pandey, Priyanka
author_sort Hoff, Karla
title Making Up People : The Effect of Identity on Preferences and Performance in a Modernizing Society
title_short Making Up People : The Effect of Identity on Preferences and Performance in a Modernizing Society
title_full Making Up People : The Effect of Identity on Preferences and Performance in a Modernizing Society
title_fullStr Making Up People : The Effect of Identity on Preferences and Performance in a Modernizing Society
title_full_unstemmed Making Up People : The Effect of Identity on Preferences and Performance in a Modernizing Society
title_sort making up people : the effect of identity on preferences and performance in a modernizing society
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/10/16816808/making-up-people-effect-identity-preferences-performance-modernizing-society
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12068
_version_ 1764418911616368640