Econo or Socio? (Week 4 post class blog)
The dichotomous conflict between Homo Economicus and Homo
Sociologicus has been significantly redefined in the past 50 years. Tseng and
Ng documented the evolution of Homo Economicus and sought to show how the two
have coalesced. By comparing prominent ideologues, they demonstrate that the
self-interest that drives rational thinking can be redefined as algorithms of
values defined by society. Humans act in the self interest as defined by
society.
According to Tseng and Ng Homo Economicus journeyed from
pure motivation of self-interest towards maximization of utility. Theories began
to associate typically societal attributes such as altruism, cooperation, and
imitation. Interestingly, the strongest experiment to attest to this new development
was the expansive iterations of the game theory. Social scientists witnessed
self-interested individuals cooperating and even imitating other players in the
game in order to maximize their potential reward. The games even suggested that
players can give away some of their own reward when the group reward is deemed
sufficient by some unidentifiable measurement. Was Homo Sociologicus beginning
to emerge? (271)
Is monetary reimbursement the only reward for Homo
Economicus? Akerlof and Kranton found that besides monetary incentives,
employees standing within the organization “played a dominant role in work
incentives.” (p.272) In this example social norms played an integral part of
the utility that Homo Economicus might be trying to maximize even if not
directly linked to monetary or otherwise tangible rewards.
This is not to suggest the Homo Economicus is being completely
taken over by Homo Sociologicus. Some of the criticism of social theories’ explanation
and analysis of behavior is its lack of definition of Homo Sociologicus’s
accounting for conflicts in self-interest and his social role. There are a lack
of criterion for how a socially driven human would choose “between norms and
individual self-interest.” (p 276).
Homo Economicus is increasingly being defined by social
roles, norms, and constructs. This analysis is aided by globalization which
provides multitudes of cases to analyze as entire societies reckon with clashes
of interest and socially constructed behaviors. We also need to analyze how
true these two theories are in regards to international relations. What are the
additional complexities introduced when now national interests, social factors
come into conflict with malleable and ill-defined international norms and
behaviors? How does game theory change as individuals morph into nation states,
international organizations, and global enterprises?
Work Cited
Ng, Irene C. L.,
and Lu-Ming Tseng. "Learning to Be Sociable The Evolution of Homo
Economicus." The American Journal of Economics and Sociology 67,
no. 2 (2008): 265-86. http://www.jstor.org.proxyau.wrlc.org/stable/27739704.
My first thought on finishing your blog (fantastic background on HE and HS), was to wonder if altruisim for selfish purposes has any place in the theory as applied to IR. ie corporations/governments giving other nations money, projects, or infrastructure to induce gratitude.
ReplyDeleteI definitely think it does. Altruism can be used to strategically to attain certain things. What these authors suggest is that people are motivated by more than tangible or traditional incentives. Someone might use altruism to attain a higher standing in someone else's mind or opinion because that in and of itself is a reward worth sacrificing for.
DeleteI want to start by agreeing with Emma, that you have provided a nice background on Homo Economicus. When I started the reading in this module, I began to think that I agreed with HE, specifically with the idea of human beings as self-interested and taking any action to get the most use as a consumer, and to gain the most possible as a producer. However, my thinking started to change after studying Homo Sociologicus. I found myself agreeing more with the concept that human beings have these preferences and ideas because of the environment around them. I had previously used the argument that growing up on a farm, in rural Wisconsin, shaped not only my preferences, but also the ideas I hold, such as the interactions between people. I strongly believe that my idea on how people should interact with each other is different from another person's idea, that say grew up in the urban New York City.
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