About “how trusting should I be”, I would like to quickly bring up a bit of the scientific research. I’ve read a bit of this, and have concluded in high certainty that individual trust gives off a decent positive externality.
However, I very much remember reading about how entrepreneurs have lower trust levels than most people on average, but can’t seem to find the paper right now.
What I’d imagine is that in general trust helps society, which makes a lot of sense as it allows trade to function. However, it may very well be that the level of trust optimal for an individual is quite lower than that optimal for his or her society. Makes sense if trust is looked at similar to altruism.
In this case, obviously the more trust people have with other people and their bags, the more cases of stealing that will occur. On the whole this may help your surrounding people, as some of these will benefit from stealing. However, the disadvantage would come to yourself at the expected cost of having your stuff stolen.
It would be interesting to factor in not only how much your bags being lost would cost you, but how much they would benefit the person who steals them.
Quite a bit of econometric research (yea, it’s not the best, but it’s what we have) shows that positive levels of trust correlate with higher economic growth.
Has anyone factored out the correlation to positive levels of trustworthiness?
Yes, this seems to be the key issue. There’s a clear causal mechanism that would lead higher levels of trustworthiness to lead to higher growth, but unwarranted trust sounds like asking for someone else to steal your GDP tokens.
The point that’s stuck with me from Fukuyama’s book on this topic (http://www.amazon.com/Trust-Social-Virtues-Creation-Prosperity/dp/0684825252) is that there’s not just one fungible bucket of trust—the types of people and institutions that attract trust within a society tend to shape and limit the types of organizations that can be formed and sustained. He argues that what permits organizations to both scale (relatively) smoothly and then subsequently persist over multiple generations is the ability of essentially random people to form bonds of trust (as opposed to forming those bonds with family members or relying on the government).
About “how trusting should I be”, I would like to quickly bring up a bit of the scientific research. I’ve read a bit of this, and have concluded in high certainty that individual trust gives off a decent positive externality.
Quite a bit of econometric research (yea, it’s not the best, but it’s what we have) shows that positive levels of trust correlate with higher economic growth.
See: http://oep.oxfordjournals.org/content/56/1/118.short http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1468-0297.00609/abstract
However, I very much remember reading about how entrepreneurs have lower trust levels than most people on average, but can’t seem to find the paper right now.
What I’d imagine is that in general trust helps society, which makes a lot of sense as it allows trade to function. However, it may very well be that the level of trust optimal for an individual is quite lower than that optimal for his or her society. Makes sense if trust is looked at similar to altruism.
In this case, obviously the more trust people have with other people and their bags, the more cases of stealing that will occur. On the whole this may help your surrounding people, as some of these will benefit from stealing. However, the disadvantage would come to yourself at the expected cost of having your stuff stolen.
It would be interesting to factor in not only how much your bags being lost would cost you, but how much they would benefit the person who steals them.
Has anyone factored out the correlation to positive levels of trustworthiness?
Yes, this seems to be the key issue. There’s a clear causal mechanism that would lead higher levels of trustworthiness to lead to higher growth, but unwarranted trust sounds like asking for someone else to steal your GDP tokens.
The point that’s stuck with me from Fukuyama’s book on this topic (http://www.amazon.com/Trust-Social-Virtues-Creation-Prosperity/dp/0684825252) is that there’s not just one fungible bucket of trust—the types of people and institutions that attract trust within a society tend to shape and limit the types of organizations that can be formed and sustained. He argues that what permits organizations to both scale (relatively) smoothly and then subsequently persist over multiple generations is the ability of essentially random people to form bonds of trust (as opposed to forming those bonds with family members or relying on the government).