Working Paper

Worldviews and Intergenerational Altruism: A Comparison of Turkish People Living in Turkey and Germany

K. Ali Akkemik, Mehmet Bulut, Marcus Dittrich, Koray Göksal, Kristina Leipold, Masao Ogaki
CESifo, Munich, 2017

CESifo Working Paper No. 6404

In this paper, we examine and compare the impact of cultural differences on intergenerational altruism in Turkish people living in Turkey and in Germany, using the anthropological concept of worldview. Data were gathered from four surveys: nationwide surveys in Turkey and Germany, an online survey of Turkish people living in Germany, and a survey conducted as an experiment in a mosque attended by Turkish people in Germany. We find striking differences in parenting attitudes between Turkish people living in Turkey and those who live in Germany. Turkish people living in Germany tend to resemble German people in their parenting attitudes. We also find that differences in confidence attached to worldview beliefs, differences in religiosity, and the subjective probabilities attached to worldview beliefs (such as “All humans evolved from another living organism”) between Turkish people living in Turkey and those in Germany have statistically significant explanatory power for these differences in parenting attitudes.

CESifo Category
Behavioural Economics
Keywords: intergenerational altruism, worldviews, religion, tough love, spoiling love
JEL Classification: Z100, Z120, D640