Research Center

Global Cooperation and Social Cohesion

Markets are essential institutions to promote economic growth and to maximize individual welfare. Nevertheless, markets are thwarted by two fundamental issues. First, markets fail to provide efficient allocation of resources in the numerous instances of externalities between individuals and states. Such failures are particularly evident in global domains where property rights cannot be properly defined. Also biased individual decision making often impair the functioning of markets, in particular in the financial sector. Climate change, vaccines to combat global pandemics, financial stability, are all instances in which some forms of cooperation – among both individuals and states – is needed to overcome market failures. Second, even when they are fully functioning, unbridled markets can create large inequalities among individuals. Although global-level economic inequality is showing moderate signs of reduction – although global inequality remains high by any standard – within-country income inequality has been on the rise in most Western countries. Stagnating or dwindling incomes for the lower brackets of the income distribution undermine social cohesion, because large cohorts of the population now feel to have been decoupled from social progress.

The goal of our Research Centre is to (1) understand how to foster global cooperation; (2) identify the root causes undermining social cohesion; (3) develop cutting-edge measurements of wellbeing; (4) propose solutions for the optimal management of collective risks, both socially and individually; (5) analyse the complex dynamic between ethical principles and market functioning. Our modus operandi rests on the belief that understanding individual behaviour is essential to solve complex problems, especially those occurring at the global level, also safeguarding individual wellbeing. Therefore, cutting-edge findings from the behavioural social sciences inform all our work. Our research is both foundational, in aiming to unveil basic tenets of human behaviour, and applied to several domains that are relevant for global cooperation and social cohesion. Our research has a strong policy orientation, as demonstrated by our continued involvement in the ThinkTank20 engagement group of the G20 in the area of social cohesion.

Deputy head

Contact

Associates

  • Christian Kaernbach
  • Catharina Probst
  • Prof. Dr. Thilo van Eimeren

Our Partner