NBER Working Papers 15064
June 2009
Abstract
We present a dictator game experiment where the recipients are local charities that serve the poor.
Donors consist of approximately 1000 participants from a nationally representative respondent panel
that is maintained by a private survey research firm, Knowledge Networks. We randomly manipulate
the perceived race and worthiness of the charity recipients by showing respondents an audiovisual
presentation about the recipients. The experiment yields three main findings. First, we find significant
racial bias in perceptions of worthiness: respondents rate recipients of their own racial group as more
worthy. Second, respondents give significantly more when the recipients are described as more worthy.
These findings may lead one to expect that respondents would also give more generously when shown
pictures of recipients belonging to their own racial group. However, our third result shows that this
is not the case; despite our successfully manipulating perceptions of race, giving does not respond
significantly to recipient race. Thus, while our respondents do seem to rate ingroup members as more
worthy, they appear to overcome this bias when it comes to giving.
Citation
Fong, Christina M., and Erzo F.P. Luttmer. "Do Race and Fairness Matter in Generosity? Evidence from a Nationally Representative Charity Experiment." NBER Working Papers 15064, June 2009.