thing?
Over a four-monthperiod late last year,we tried to find out with a simple test.We visited 14cities,towns and communities in nine countries.In each,we"lost"tenordinary
wallets filled withthe local equivalent of ¥10to¥50 in cash,a local address and phonenumber,classified ads from local newspapers,handwritten shoppinglists,everything
needed to make thewallets look real.Then we waited to see what would happen.
The results weremore revealing than we expected.Overall,out of 140 wallets we dropped acrossAsia,80 were returned一 57percent. A similar experiment in
in almost identicaltotals.Out of 200 wallets dropped in Europe,116 were returnedes 一58 percent.In the United States,thereturn rate was slightly higher:80 out of 120一67
percent.
In the US,only oneperson declined to take the money in the wallet when it was offered as a rewardfor being honest.In Europe,more than a quarter refused to take the
money.In Asia,astaggering 72 percent of those who returned the wallets一 58 of 80一saidno to any reward.
"I cannotaccept a reward for having done the right thing,"said a university studentin
a charity orreligious organization.
Within Asia we foundother interesting results.Two-thirds of all our wallets were retrieved bymen.But once the wallet was picked up,it made little difference whether the
finder was male orfe-male.In our study,58 percent of the women who picked up wallets returnedthem and so did 56 percent of the men.
Are the people in
the three largestcities visiteD.Seoul,
Kamakura,Japan一with populations ranging from 180,000to 2.8 million.
A.Right
B.Wrong
C.Not mentioned.