Money Helps When Money Feels: Money Anthropomorphism Increases Charitable Giving

Citation
Zhou, Xinyue et al., Money Helps When Money Feels: Money Anthropomorphism Increases Charitable Giving, Journal of consumer research JCR;Consumer research , 45(5), 2019, pp. 953-972
ISSN journal
00935301
Volume
45
Issue
5
Year of publication
2019
Pages
953 - 972
Database
ACNP
SICI code
Abstract
Across five studies, the current research demonstrates that imbuing money with humanlike characteristics can enhance charitable giving. Based on mind perception theory, we propose that anthropomorphizing money can induce people to attribute to money the capacity to feel and sense (i.e., warmth) and the capacity to do things (i.e., competence). Further, we argue that enhanced warmth perception increases charitable giving. Studies 1a and 1b provided initial evidence that money anthropomorphism increased charitable giving by measuring real monetary donation behavior (study 1a) and by adopting a practical method to anthropomorphize money in charitable appeals (study 1b). Study 2 showed that money anthropomorphism enhanced both warmth and competence perceptions of money, but that only enhanced warmth perception increased donation intention. Study 3 showed that money anthropomorphism did not enhance other types of charitable giving, such as signature provision. Study 4 showed that the money anthropomorphism effect was unique to money and that anthropomorphizing other financial instruments, such as a credit card, did not induce the same effect.