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Abstract

Iannaccone (1994) uses rational choice theory to argue that strict rules (e.g., no smoking or drinking) raise average commitment levels in conservative churches because strictness discourages free riding. Tests of this assertion have been hampered, in part, by uncertainties concerning how free riding should be measured. We introduce a new, indirect measure of free (and cheap) riding, the level of positive skewness of a congregation's money contributions-that is, the extent to which a few members give much more than the mean amount while the majority gives much less. Using a study of giving in five denominations, we find that strict, conservative congregations have both higher mean giving and less skewness in the patterns of their giving. The higher mean-contribution levels at strict, conservative congregations: are not simply due to each member giving more or a few members giving a lot more. Instead, as Iannaccone's model predicts, some combination of strict rules and/or conservative theology appears to systematically limit the proportion of free- and cheap-riding members giving far less than the mean and thus increase the proportion giving at or above the mean. Reprinted by permission of Society for the Scientific Study of Religion

Details

Identifier / keyword
Title
Free and cheap riding in strict, conservative churches
Volume
44
Issue
2
Pages
123-142
Number of pages
20
Publication year
2005
ISSN
0021-8294
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Peer reviewed
Yes
Language of publication
English
Document type
Journal Article
Update
2013-06-12
Accession number
2952481
ProQuest document ID
38162620
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/free-cheap-riding-strict-conservative-churches/docview/38162620/se-2?accountid=208611
Last updated
2013-09-16
Database
ProQuest One Academic