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On wealth and the diversity of friendships: High social class people around the world have fewer international friends


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Authors

Yearwood, Maurice H 
Cuddy, Amy 
Lamba, Nishtha 
Youyou, Wu 
van der Lowe, Ilmo 

Abstract

Having international social ties carries many potential advantages, including access to novel ideas and greater commercial opportunities. Yet little is known about who forms more international friendships. Here, we propose social class plays a key role in determining people’s internationalism. We conducted two studies to test whether social class is related positively to internationalism (the building social class hypothesis) or negatively to internationalism (the restricting social class hypothesis). In Study 1, we found that among individuals in the United States, social class was negatively related to percentage of friends on Facebook that are outside the United States. In Study 2, we extended these findings to the global level by analyzing country-level data on Facebook friends formed in 2011 (nearly 50 billion friendships) across 187 countries. We found that people from higher social class countries (as indexed by GDP per capita) had lower levels of internationalism—that is, they made more friendships domestically than abroad.

Description

This is the final published version. It first appeared from Elsevier via http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2015.07.040

Keywords

friendships, social class, internationalism

Journal Title

Personality and Individual Differences

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0191-8869

Volume Title

87

Publisher

Elsevier BV