Does Money Change Political Views? – An Investigation of Money Priming and the Preference for Right-Wing Politics

In a multistudy approach across seven studies we explored whether, as suggested by previous research, money primes affect people’s political orientation. Across the studies we used different dependent variables and samples, and we combined the results in a small-scale meta-analysis to test two compe...

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Main Authors: Johannes Schuler, Igor Ivanov, Michaela Wänke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2017-08-01
Series:Journal of Social and Political Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/748
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spelling doaj-b73169062b8b4855af2fb5bc17c7dd0f2020-11-25T03:17:11ZengPsychOpenJournal of Social and Political Psychology2195-33252017-08-015239641410.5964/jspp.v5i2.748jspp.v5i2.748Does Money Change Political Views? – An Investigation of Money Priming and the Preference for Right-Wing PoliticsJohannes Schuler0Igor Ivanov1Michaela Wänke2Department of Consumer & Economic Psychology, University of Mannheim, Mannheim, GermanyDepartment of Consumer & Economic Psychology, University of Mannheim, Mannheim, GermanyDepartment of Consumer & Economic Psychology, University of Mannheim, Mannheim, GermanyIn a multistudy approach across seven studies we explored whether, as suggested by previous research, money primes affect people’s political orientation. Across the studies we used different dependent variables and samples, and we combined the results in a small-scale meta-analysis to test two competing hypotheses. Independent of the measures and experimental setting, our findings did not indicate that money primes lead to stronger right-wing orientations (main-effect hypothesis). However, we obtained a marginally significant interaction effect suggesting that the money priming effect is moderated by subjective socioeconomic status (moderation hypothesis). These findings suggest that, contrary to previous research, the money priming effect on political orientation is at best small and dependent on one’s subjective socioeconomic status. Implications for money priming research and political psychology are discussed.http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/748moneyprimingpolitical orientationsubjective socioeconomic statusmeta-analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johannes Schuler
Igor Ivanov
Michaela Wänke
spellingShingle Johannes Schuler
Igor Ivanov
Michaela Wänke
Does Money Change Political Views? – An Investigation of Money Priming and the Preference for Right-Wing Politics
Journal of Social and Political Psychology
money
priming
political orientation
subjective socioeconomic status
meta-analysis
author_facet Johannes Schuler
Igor Ivanov
Michaela Wänke
author_sort Johannes Schuler
title Does Money Change Political Views? – An Investigation of Money Priming and the Preference for Right-Wing Politics
title_short Does Money Change Political Views? – An Investigation of Money Priming and the Preference for Right-Wing Politics
title_full Does Money Change Political Views? – An Investigation of Money Priming and the Preference for Right-Wing Politics
title_fullStr Does Money Change Political Views? – An Investigation of Money Priming and the Preference for Right-Wing Politics
title_full_unstemmed Does Money Change Political Views? – An Investigation of Money Priming and the Preference for Right-Wing Politics
title_sort does money change political views? – an investigation of money priming and the preference for right-wing politics
publisher PsychOpen
series Journal of Social and Political Psychology
issn 2195-3325
publishDate 2017-08-01
description In a multistudy approach across seven studies we explored whether, as suggested by previous research, money primes affect people’s political orientation. Across the studies we used different dependent variables and samples, and we combined the results in a small-scale meta-analysis to test two competing hypotheses. Independent of the measures and experimental setting, our findings did not indicate that money primes lead to stronger right-wing orientations (main-effect hypothesis). However, we obtained a marginally significant interaction effect suggesting that the money priming effect is moderated by subjective socioeconomic status (moderation hypothesis). These findings suggest that, contrary to previous research, the money priming effect on political orientation is at best small and dependent on one’s subjective socioeconomic status. Implications for money priming research and political psychology are discussed.
topic money
priming
political orientation
subjective socioeconomic status
meta-analysis
url http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/748
work_keys_str_mv AT johannesschuler doesmoneychangepoliticalviewsaninvestigationofmoneyprimingandthepreferenceforrightwingpolitics
AT igorivanov doesmoneychangepoliticalviewsaninvestigationofmoneyprimingandthepreferenceforrightwingpolitics
AT michaelawanke doesmoneychangepoliticalviewsaninvestigationofmoneyprimingandthepreferenceforrightwingpolitics
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