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Jun-18-2007 09:20TweetFollow @OregonNews Study: Paying Taxes, Giving, Helps the BrainSalem-News.comUO study provides neural insights into the economics of philanthropy.
(EUGENE, Ore. ) - Want to light up the pleasure center in your brain? Just pay your taxes, and then give a little extra voluntarily to your local food bank. University of Oregon scientists have found that doing those deeds can give you the same sort of satisfaction you derive from feeding your own hunger pangs. A three-member team – a cognitive psychologist and two economists – published its results in the June 15 issue of the journal Science. The scientists gave 19 women participants $100 and then scanned their brains with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) as they watched their money go to the food bank through mandatory taxation, and as they made choices about whether to give more money voluntarily or keep it for themselves. The participants lay on their backs in the fMRI scanner for an hour-long session and viewed the financial transfers on a computer screen. The scanner used a super-cooled magnet, carefully tuned radio waves and powerful computers to calculate what parts of the brain were active as subjects saw their money go to the food bank and made yes or no decisions on additional giving. Researchers found that two evolutionarily ancient regions deep in the brain – the caudate nucleus and the nucleus accumbens – fired when subjects saw the charity get the money. The activation was even larger when people gave the money voluntarily, instead of just paying it as taxes. These brain regions are the same ones that fire when basic needs such as food and pleasures (sweets or social contact) are satisfied. "The surprising element for us was that in a situation in which your money is simply given to others – where you do not have a free choice – you still get reward-center activity," said Ulrich Mayr, a professor of psychology. "I don't think that most economists would have suspected that. It reinforces the idea that there is true altruism – where it's all about how well the common good is doing. I've heard people claim that they don't mind paying taxes, if it's for a good cause – and here we showed that you can actually see this going on inside the brain, and even measure it." The study gives economists a novel look inside the brain during taxation, said co-author William T. Harbaugh, a UO professor of economics and member of the National Bureau of Economic Research in Cambridge, Mass. "To economists, the surprising thing about this paper is that we actually see people getting rewards as they give up money," he said. "Neural firing in this fundamental, primitive part of the brain is larger when your money goes to a non-profit charity to help other people." "On top of that," Harbaugh added, "people experience more brain activation when they give voluntarily – even though everything here is anonymous. That's a very surprising result – and, to me, an optimistic one." However, this latter finding, which offers confirmation to the economic theory of "warm-glow" giving, doesn't necessarily mean that taxes should be lowered and charity relied on more heavily, Harbaugh said. In a voluntary environment, he added, lots of people free-ride and donations fall. The study, Mayr said, reflects the balancing act that every society must face. "What this shows to someone who designs tax policy is that taxes aren't all bad," he said. "Paying taxes can make citizens happy. People are, to varying degrees, pure altruists. On top of that they like that warm glow they get from charitable giving. Until now we couldn’t trace that in the brain." Neural activation from mandatory taxation, the researchers said, helps predict who will give. "We could call the people whose brains light up more when money goes to charity than to themselves altruists," Mayr said. "The others are egoists. Based on what we saw in the experiments, we can use this classification to predict how much people are willing to give when the choice is theirs." There remain a lot of unanswered questions, Harbaugh said. "We show that people liked paying a tax that went to a food bank. But suppose the tax had been unfair. What then? Or suppose that people voted to make other people pay the tax, too? That would help other people even more, so would the voter get a bigger neural reward?" Harbaugh, Mayr and co-author Dan Burghart, an economics graduate student, say they are not worried about the possibility that governments could use their method to monitor tax evasion, or charities could use it to figure out whom to ask for money. "To do this, we needed a $3 million scanner, some liquid helium and a few weeks of computer time," Harbaugh said. "If a participant moved her head," Burghart added, "we had to start all over. It will be a while before this is built into cell phones." The National Institute of Aging supported the research. Articles for June 17, 2007 | Articles for June 18, 2007 | Articles for June 19, 2007 | Support Salem-News.com: Quick Links
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Henry Ruark June 19, 2007 10:02 am (Pacific time)
JB's Comment makes one wonder what part of "brain" lights up for that level and kind of "feeling". Also probably reflects 30-year effort by Norquist cabal et al to build automatic reaction to canny "framing" of their ideas.
How Stupid June 18, 2007 6:34 pm (Pacific time)
The 16th Ammendment was never ratified. There is no law that requires you to pay taxes on your wages. The I.R.S. can show no law because of the fraud put over the American People in 1913. There have been a few cases of ex-I.R.S. agents and other people that have won but the I.R.S. does not want this one let out of the bag. See "America: Freedom to Fascism" by Aaron Russo. Read about agent Joe Banister and others.
JB June 18, 2007 6:03 pm (Pacific time)
He might be right, I'd be happy if I knew the tax money I gave went to help buy a new cruise missle instead of going to a welfare mom.
Duh! June 18, 2007 2:31 pm (Pacific time)
The research is flawed. People are happy to give away money in tax money when IT ISN'T THEIR MONEY! They are only happy to give away some of this money in taxes because it is free money they are given as part of the experiment--it wouldn't work if this was money they EARNED by doing WORK. Want to see the REAL effect of taxes on the pleasure centers? Hook up some brain scanners to people while they are filling out their long forms on April 15.
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