What the study found
The study found a punctuated pattern of cooperation: group cooperation started high, gradually declined, and then showed sharp rebounds when loans were restarted. The authors say the long-term decline was driven by behavioural mechanisms and by decreases in group members’ cooperative motivation and effort.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors conclude that these findings have direct implications for preventing behavioural decline in cooperative programmes and institutions. They also suggest that the decline in cooperation is not only a result of strategic behavior or learning, but can arise from systematic changes in behaviour over time.
What the researchers tested
The researchers analysed a natural social dilemma in the field: group lending in Sierra Leone. In this joint-liability contract, if the group loan is not repaid in full, all members lose access to future credit. The dataset included 47,931 group payments from 7,108 borrowers, plus a two-stage cluster sample of semi-structured interviews, over a five-year period.
What worked and what didn't
Cooperation rates were initially high, but they declined over time. Sharp rebounds occurred when loans were restarted and clients were resensitized to their cooperative responsibilities, even though group membership and the dilemma structure were largely unchanged. With each successive restart, the later decline became more rapid.
What to keep in mind
The abstract does not describe detailed limitations beyond the fact that the study focused on one field setting: group lending in Sierra Leone. It also does not provide information about causality beyond the associations and patterns reported in the observed data.
Key points
- The study reports a punctuated decline in cooperation over a five-year period.
- Cooperation began high, then gradually fell, with sharp rebounds after loan restarts.
- The decline was linked to decreases in cooperative motivation and effort.
- The analysis used 47,931 group payments from 7,108 borrowers, plus interviews.
- Each successive restart was followed by a faster subsequent decline.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Human cooperation declined in punctuated steps over time
- Authors:
- Nicholas Sabin, David Klinowski, Felix Reed‐Tsochas
- Institutions:
- Oxford BioMedica (United Kingdom), Universidad de Santiago de Chile, University of Oxford, University of Oxford, William & Mary
- Publication date:
- 2026-04-22
- OpenAlex record:
- View
- Image credit:
- Photo by congerdesign on Pixabay · Pixabay License
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