Children as young as 5 have a nuanced understanding of fairness, according to a new study.
The research shows they incorporate market concerns—the idea that what you get is in line with what you give or offer—into their decision making and increasingly do so as they get older.
Some people think children are innately selfish—they want to get goodies for themselves. Other people think children are innately altruistic—they care about helping others. Most people think children are both.
“The trick is knowing when and how to balance self interest and concern for others—what is appropriate in different circumstances,” says Margaret Echelbarger, a recent University of Michigan psychology doctoral graduate.
Studying how children engage in different types of exchanges clarifies the origins of these behaviors, as well as their developmental course.
“This in turn tells us a bit more about ourselves as adults,” Echelbarger says.
The new research, which appears in Child Development, included 195 children ages 5-10 and 60 adults helping a giver distribute stickers to friends. They distributed stickers equally between friends when offers were the same, but unequally when different offers were made.
There were times when the participants distributed more stickers to the friends offering more money, which meant children—as they aged—were willing to abandon equal norms for distribution. More specifically, older children distributed more stickers to friends who paid more even when the other friend wanted to pay but couldn’t.
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“These findings are especially interesting in light of young children’s limited exposure to market/economic instruction,” Echelbarger says. “We show that, from a young age, children are developing an understanding of the ‘rules’ of market exchanges.”
Echelbarger and colleagues also found that children are sensitive to the reasons underlying the different offers. Children penalize recipients refusing to pay more than recipients willing but unable to pay, she says.
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The findings are consistent with prior research that children incorporate equity concerns, such as merit and need, into their distribution decisions, researchers say.
Other coauthors are from the University of Michigan and from the University of Wisconsin.
Source: University of Michigan