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Poverty Attributions and Emotions Associated With Willingness to Help and Government Aid
Author(s) -
Lucas Yúdica,
Franco Bastias,
Edgardo Etchezahar
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
psihologijske teme
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1849-0395
pISSN - 1332-0742
DOI - 10.31820/pt.30.3.6
Subject(s) - poverty , government (linguistics) , psychology , anger , attribution , empathy , compassion , pity , social psychology , developmental psychology , political science , economic growth , economics , linguistics , philosophy , law
This study aims to understand how willingness to help people in poverty and the agreement with providing government aid are connected to emotions and attributional processes, in a country with a high poverty rate such as Argentina. Differences in poverty attributions and emotionsamong self-reported social class are also analysed. A total sample of 331 secondary-school students completed self-administered questionnaires. Correlations and regression analyses showed that, whereas emotions such as compassion, empathy and pity seem to motivate helping behaviours, explanations as to the cause of poverty, rather thanemotions, are closely associated with an agreement to providing government aid. However, low levels of anger seem to be required to endorse both helping behaviours and agreement to providing government aid. On the other hand, respondents who self-identify as belonging to upper classes report more anger and use fewer structural explanations tounderstand poverty than lower-classes respondents. We propose that future research analyse a greater variety of helping behaviours towards people in poverty and types of government intervention in the global south.

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