AMBA's Ambition magazine: Issue 59, December 22/January 2023

NEWS AND INSIGHT 

WOMEN MORE LIKELY TO COLLABORATE INTERNATIONALLY COUNTRY: UK SCHOOL: Durham University Business School Women are more likely to engage in international collaborations than men, according to a new study that has clear implications for government departments and organisations focused on international affairs. In the study, approximately 600 university students in the US and China took part in a version of the Prisoner’s Dilemma – a game scenario first developed by the RAND Corporation in 1950 that analyses people’s propensity towards cooperating with a counterpart for mutual reward as opposed to betraying that counterpart for individual reward. Participants in the study were only told if their counterpart was from the same country. The study found that a higher proportion of women were willing to collaborate than men. “Technological advances, globalisation and increasing worldwide prosperity all contribute to growing international interactions and joint participation in projects. The success of these relies upon individuals’ abilities to engage cooperatively without formal institutional enforcements,” said Durham University

Business School’s Jason Shachat, a professor of experimental economics who co-authored the study. The study also asked participants questions about their countries and found that those who displayed a less positive attitude to their country of origin were also more likely to collaborate with an international counterpart. Using a dataset from the US and China, the study’s results also underline the need for greater understanding between the world’s two largest economies. While US participants in the study were slightly more likely to cooperate internationally than their Chinese counterparts, those in the US also tended to overestimate the likelihood of Chinese participants’ cooperation, whereas those in China, on average, correctly estimated the cooperation likelihood of US participants. Indeed, participants in China had more negative opinions towards their US counterparts in the study’s second iteration in March 2022, compared to its first iteration in December 2020. The authors find this to be indicative of how geopolitical events can shift people’s attitudes towards international cooperation. With particular reference to relations between China and the US, they also feel that the study as a whole offers guidance of how barriers to cooperation can be overcome. “Bilateral trade between the two countries accounts for more than 10 per cent of total international trade. Collaboration between the two countries has a huge effect on the world, and can dramatically benefit both the organisations involved and also society as a whole,” explained Shachat . TBD

Ambition | DECEMBER 2022/JANUARY 2023 | 11

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