Culture and Observation in the Study of Economic Systems

 

Carsten Herrmann-Pillath

 

University of Witten/Herdecke, Germany, Department of Business Economics, Institute for Comparative Research into Culture and Economic Systems

phone             +49-2302-926-572

fax                   +49-2302-926-571

e-mail             chepi@uni-wh.de

 

Abstract

In recent years the concept of “culture” has been revived in order to understand differences in the institutional set-up and performance of economic systems. At the same time, scholars increasingly adopt a cognitive science approach. On closer scrutiny, however, culture is shown to be either redundant or leading into serious paradoxa of self-reference in scientific analysis, if the concept is related to cognitive schemes and/or informal institutions. This is also valid in case of attempts at treating culture as a black box by means of relying exclusively on “culture free” data (for example, data on international trade). Therefore I propose to define culture as a “pattern” (of cognitive schemes or informal institutions) that is not directly accessible to observation, but can be conceived of as emergent property of the relation between observer and observed object, like the economic system. Based on a detailed description of that process of observation I sketch a specific strategy for empirical research. Here, culture becomes an hypothesis of the scientific observer that is based on observing the observation of culture.

 

 

Culture and Observation in the Study of Economic Systems

 

1.                Culture: a measure of our ignorance, jack of all trades, or what?

 

Culture, a surprising event

There seems to be a strong correlation between the use of „culture“ in research on economic systems and the difficulties of explaining their ongoing institutional change and performance. Researchers refer the more frequently to the concept of culture, the more surprises emerge in their field of investigation that cannot be explained by the general theories at hand, and when actual developments display highly singular charachteristics. For example, in recent analyses of the experience with transition in Central and East European economies the puzzle has been noticed that similar policies have led to highly diversified outcomes. In particular, there seems to be a systematic difference between Central European and Eastern European countries which could be related to a different historical background and which fits remarkably well to the historical borderline between catholic (pre-reformation) and orthodox religious communities. Hence, the hypothesis is adduced that a different cultural heritage influences institutional changes.[1] In a similar vein, the surprising “miracle” of East Asian growth had been related to a common Confucian heritage by many observers even in the context of standard growth analysis because that heritage seems to influence the speed of human capital formation.

Of course, the example of transition also illustrates the immense difficulties in applying the concept of culture. On the one hand, at closer scrutiny we realize immediately that there are substantial differences in government behavior and in the politics of transition, as for example when comparing the Russian and Polish performance supposedly both resulting from a similar shock therapy (Frye/Shleifer, 1997). Furthermore, even if there is a certain correlation between cultural and economic phenomena, both can be influenced by a common hidden determinant, as, for example, geography in terms of distance from the coast, climate and so on (Gallup et al., 1998). In general, cultural explanations suffer from the endemic problem of potential misspecification and hidden determinants.

The analytical issues become even more complex, however, when we begin to ask for the deeper reasons why there are policy differences or how geography works, because we might go a full circle just back to culture again: geography, for example, is relevant for economic phenomena only via human action, and for explaining societal responses to the challenges posed by certain topographical features we need to explain institutions and behavior, hence may be compelled to re-introduce „culture“ just after having discarded it.[2] Hence we cannot but note that in the first step „culture“ is indeed a measure of our ignorance, however since our ignorance is overwhelming indeed, we cannot do without the concept.

 

Culture, a disenabling force

Another motivation for the use of culture in economic analyses is the experience of the incapacity to control and steer institutional changes. This is of course concomitant to the problem of ignorance, but special attention should be paid to the possible incapacity to define certain models of change and to adopt these models intentionally under other circumstances. A conspicious example is the long-standing debate over the presumed „Otherness“ of Japan in the areas of industrial policy and enterprise organization. Many observers argued that there are special cultural determinants in the modes of interaction between bureaucracy and companies as well as between suppliers and producers. However, unless these cultural factors cannot be imitated outside Japan, the majority would conclude that although there might be some specific historical causes of the emergence of those patterns of interaction, the very fact of controlled imitation demonstrates that under present circumstances there is no longer any persisting cultural impact.

In search of a definition of culture, hence we might begin with describing “culture” as something that we cannot fully understand and utilize, even though we experience its influence. Just because we experience such a diffuse feeling of „resistance“ in real world institutions and systems, we are inclined to attribute cultural properties to our object of research. As a matter of fact, most users of the concept assume that culture is something objectively given that could be possibly described and explained by the scientific observer. Culture is a „thing“ in the sense of being a cause of certain effects that we can observe.[3]

 

Culture, a thing in many disguises

Precisely in that sense the concept is applied within many different settings, even if culture is not attributed the primordial role in the respective theories. One of the most intriguing cases is the frenzy with which theorists have recently discussed the concept of „social capital“ (for a comprehensive overview, see Dasgupta/Serageldin, 1999).[4] In a similar fashion like culture, social capital is used to explain something that we do not fully understand, namely the reasons for the diverging economic performance of different countries and regions, of different groups and peoples. Given the difficulties in defining social capital, culture turns out to be adduced in two different ways. First, when distinguishing between networks and informal institutions in the analysis of social capital, culture might refer to the underlying values and beliefs, hence cognitive phenomena in the most general meaning of the term.[5] Second, culture may denote the entire pattern of social capital, institutions and values, hence in fact denotes the individuality of the single case. The latter use, of course, does only make sense if there is something to anchor the empirical reference. Most frequently this is achieved by means of constructing a historical sequence leading from historical accounts of the societies in question to their contemporary situation. Here, the uniqueness culture is intimately linked to the singularity of history.[6]

It is revealing to observe that there are many uses of culture in the analysis of economic systems and institutions, but the majority of researchers do not establish a full-scale cultural theory. As in the example of social capital, culture is treated almost en passant, sometimes implying that we all understand what culture means so that a short mentioning suffices to get the point.[7] As a result, there is neither a clear definition of culture nor even a hint at a workable empirical approach. In particular, economists prefer to use concepts like “informal institutions” which seem to be closer to established fields of research like game theory or institutional economics. Yet, they also mention culture without explaining neatly the analytical distinction between both concepts.[8] The same is true for the relation between concepts like „mental models“ and culture.

 

Redefining culture

In this paper, I wish to propose a radical solution for the conceptual muddle we have met so far. The cause underlying the problems seems to be that culture is somehow reified without at the same time providing a clear picture about that “thing”. My approach is to take the obvious correlation between our ignorance and the recourse to culture at face value. I am going to treat culture as a property of the observer, not of her object. Or, more exactly, culture has to be conceived of as an emerging property of the relation between observer and observed. Culture does not exist as a property unless there is an observer. Hence, without analyzing the observer, we cannot access culture.[9]

From that perspective, there is a clear reason why ignorance and culture are so closely related. Culture denotes those aspects of our field of observation that are singular in nature (on the following, see Herrmann-Pillath, 2000, chpt. 2). By definition, singular properties cannot be described by general propositions but have to be identified by singular terms. However, we cannot make any general statement about which features of reality might be truly singular or not. Therefore, singular properties can only be identified in relation to a particular observer who is not able to put forward a description in general propositions. In abstract terms, this matches well the attitudes of observers, for example, of the Japanese firm. As long as they are not able to provide a general explanation for certain properties of the J-firm, they regard this as a cultural phenomenon. In the moment when they are able to produce such a generalized description, and if they are even able to translate this into effective managerial advice to other firms, the cultural features of that case whither away.

Treating culture as an emergent property of the relation between observer and observed adds considerably complexities to the use of the concept because we need to distinguish between theoretical modes of observation and participant behavioral modes. Since there can be a strong interaction between these different modes, culture turns out to be a fuzzy and dizzy idea by necessity, and not by lack of analytical rigour. However, our gain results into being able to avoid the many pitfalls of cultural arguments in economic analysis.

 

2.                How to disentangle culture

 

Culture is used in a sloppy, incomprehensively naive way in most of its applications in economics. Here, suffice to mention some examples (for a more extensive treatment, see Herrmann-Pillath, 1999). Very often culture and „society“ or „nation“ are related, as in the expression „Chinese culture“, without considering the issue of distinguishing between group-specific cultures or regional cultures within a country.[10] In other cases, culture is referred to history without making the causal mechanism explicit that links certain historical patterns with present phenomena. There is no clear foundation of the concept in behavioral analyses.[11] Economists who introduce the concept mostly shun the explicit consideration how this idea can be integrated into the basic behavioral model of economics without leading into severe contradictions.[12] Finally, culture is treated as a cause, yet we are not offered any convincing approach how to identify that cause by quantitative and/or qualitative measures and descriptions.[13] Furthermore, an intriguing observation is the fact that economists mostly develop independent approaches to culture. Seemingly, there are even barriers against adopting approaches used in Management Sciences, not to speak about disciplines like social psychology or anthropology.[14]

Considering these fault lines, it is all too obvious that the use of the concept of culture is ridden by fads and fashions. In particular, if economists feel certain about their explanations, they will avoid the concept, only to unbury it after a while of feeling ignorant when tackling a special case. In the theory of economic systems this attitude can be readily observed after a “surprising” model has collapsed. In theory, socialism presupposed a “new man” imbued with impartial and altruistic motivation, and the East Asian model assumed men deeply influenced by a sort of vernacular Confucianism. In both cases, the recent eruptions were interpreted as a sign of a universal convergence of institutions and values, hence culture: The “end of history” would also be the “end of culture”.

In redesigning the concept of culture, we start out with the problem of distinguishing analytically between culture, cognition and institutions.

 

2.1                                     Separating culture analytically from cognition and institutions

Perhaps one of the theoretically most respectable arguments on culture is found in the recent upsurge of cognitive science approaches in economics (for a collection of contributions, see Streit et al. 1997). Here, culture is equated with sets of cognitive schemes that enable economic agents to economize on information, to systematicize otherwise chaotic perceptions and to learn in uncertain environments. Therefore, the concept of culture becomes a necessary complement to the rejection of the standard economic assumptions on perfect rationality and complete information. Culture is deemed to be a response to uncertainty, especially in social interaction. The crucial ingredient of this approach lies in the definition of culture as „shared meanings“, that is to say, culture refers to cognitive schemes that are common to a group of people, and not only to a single person.[15]

Sharedness and level of aggregation

From that point of view, culture can be a property of two people as well as of any other larger group. However, since culture is also used as a distinctive feature separating different groups, the concept cannot refer to the largest possible group, i.e. mankind, as far as synchronic analysis is concerned. In that case we would speak of a „human universal“, yet if we turn to diachronic analysis we might even speak of a “global modern culture” as compared to other large groups in the past.[16] But independent from the question of maximum scale, the question may be raised what the appropriate level of aggregation is in order to make a sensible use of „culture“ possible. Indeed, there is the usage of concepts like „corporate culture“ aside of „national culture“ and many other possible references.

Whereas the problem of appropriate aggregation may be treated as an issue of convention, the criterion of sharedness is not innocuous. Following Wittgenstein’s (1958) decisive verdict against the possibility of private languages, we have to conclude that there cannot be such a thing like “meaning that is not shared” because otherwise their would be no anchor stabilizing the frame of reference. If that is accepted, cognitive schemes and culture have to be conflated by necessity: There is either a set of universal cognitive schemes and no culture, or the different sets of cognitive schemes that reflect and constitute different cultures. Thus, only the level of aggregation is left as a possible criterion to distinguish between culture and cognition, if we stick to the cognitive approach to culture.[17] In other words, if we reject the standard economic concept of rationality and if instead we adopt a more complex view of cognitive schemes, cognition proper turns out as a cultural phenomenon. This conclusion lends some plausibility to arguments that would restrict a „cultural sphere“ to a certain field different e.g. from religion, ethics and others. However, most users of the concept include all those different fields into the semantic reach of „culture“ (e.g. Rosenbaum, 1999).

Beyond cognition and institutions: culture as a pattern

Therefore, basing the concept of culture on the concept of cognitive schemes raises more questions as it resolves. Aside from focusing on a particular level of aggregation one way out of the conundrum is to define culture as the peculiar pattern of a manifold of cognitive schemes (for related view, see DiMaggio, 1997). This would assign the cognitive schemes to a position somewhat similar to „memes“, that is to say, schemes would be conceived of as non-reducible building blocks of cognition, and cultures would be defined according to the structure of the „molecule“ built out of these „atoms“.[18] Culture would be an emergent phenomenon of cognition, and could not be treated as being a cognitive scheme itself. One can even imagine that there is a universal set of cognitive schemes which can be arranged into a manifold of patterns.[19] Only the patterns are culture specific.

Before continuing this thread of the argument, we need to clarify another misplaced mix of categories. The other promising candidate for defining culture is the concept of informal institutions. In many uses, both concepts are used interchangeably and with fuzzy semantic borderlines. I cannot delve into the details here, but clearly culture must be something separate from informal institutions. We could replicate the argument produced before and assign culture to the function of denoting an ordered pattern of a manifold of informal institutions. In that case, both concepts would be clearly separated from each other since reference is established on different levels.

However, many scholars would not accept a mutually exclusive relation between informal institutions and culture because formal institutions bear the stamp of culture, too, like in the case of legal traditions.[20] That means, the many troubles with distinguishing neatly between formal and informal institutions would also affect the use of the concept of culture. If formal institutions are defined according to the criterion of being written rules that are sanctioned by formal organizations, precisely that criterion is in turn dependent on culture in the common usage of that term. For example, many economists treat the family as an example of an informal institution, but then what to do with kinship organizations based on written charters? Indeed, on closer scrutiny, the distinction between formal and informal institutions is tantamount to a very specific theory of modernization where the legal codes and styles of government organization peculiar to Western societies are conceived as yardsticks in order to fix the difference.

Yet, the real analytical mess is reached if we follow the practice adopted by many scholars who introduce informal institutions and cognitive schemes simultaneously. Evidently, this approach would only make sense if we were able to distinguish clearly between external institutions and internalized beliefs, values and cognitive procedures. In fact, the concept of informal institutions can only be used in an exact way if we stick to the standard idea of rationality. In that case, we can explain the emergence and stability of informal institutions by referring to certain incentives and rational decisions. But in the moment when we introduce cognitive schemes that are not universal to every human agent, we face the problem that we could no longer compare the effects of incentives because these effects depend on the peculiar way how incentives are perceived. Radically speaking, with non-universal cognitive schemes there are no longer any institutions, because all the institutions do only exist as certain cognitive regularities having systematic behavioral effects.[21] We may conclude, hence, that in the study of culture we need to vote for either informal institutions or cognitive schemes, but never for both. Of course, this argument is analogous to the standard methodological defense of universally stable and identical preferences in economics which emphasizes the need to establish a clear and unequivocal separation between environment and decision.

The hermeneutical trap: Perceiving patterns

Nevertheless, a clear vote may not finally settle our problems with culture. If we go back to our attempt at referring to culture as an emergent pattern of a manifold of either cognitive schemes or informal institutions, the question arises how we define such a pattern. This, of course, is a problem of cognition proper. In either approaches we have to introduce the fundamental distinction between outside observer and inside observer. Who perceives the pattern? How does a pattern influence behavior via its constituents?

These are very intricate issues indeed, because pattern recognition is, after all, a cognitive act so that there is a fundamental problem of self-reference. If we introduce culture as a theoretical term, we would need to set up a frame of reference for identifying patterns empirically. There is no necessary implication that those patterns are recognized by the agents who act under their influence (just as we do not need to know about the workings of our stomach in order to eat). But this seems to fly in the face of most common uses of the concept where we meet the implicit presumption that people know about their culture (althoughj they might not know about its function). On the other hand, we may assume that behavior reflects culture just because people realize the patterns and act accordingly by more or less conscious choice. In that case we would have to reconstruct the perception of the inside agents before developing an independent scientific view of cultural phenomena.[22]

Obviously, there is now a real danger of running into the traps of hermeneutical circles because if patterns are being perceived, their processing is a cognitive phenomenon, too, and hence if culture is a pattern of cognitive schemes, perception of culture is dependent on culture. A careful consideration of this conclusion demonstrates, that we can free ourselves out of that trap if we approach culture as a dynamic phenomenon, and if we analyze the process of observing culture. We briefly consider two exemplary approaches in some more detail which are directly relevant to economic analysis.

Culture and the perception of the self in social space

Let us introduce the general idea that people posite themselves in a perceived social space and try to guide their behavior to a certain degree according to the expectations of others (Bernheim, 1994). This does by no means contradict standard economic concepts of utility maximization because our self-esteem certainly can be treated as a preference and contributes to our well-being. Hence we might assume a universal human preference for a certain social respect extended by others. However, as Kuran (1995) has demonstrated convincingly, such kind of preference set introduces complex interactions between the individual and the aggregate collective level of behavior. The reason is straightforward: actual individual behavior becomes frequency-dependent.[23] In Kuran’s approach, the distinction is introduced between individual private preferences, publicly revealed preferences and actual distribution of behavior in a collective. For example, an individual might prefer a certain behavior but does not opt for a realization because this would deviate considerably from the observed behavioral norm in the collective. Therefore, she demonstrates another preference for the sole purpose to enjoy social reputation. That means, there is a trade-off between utility gains from following one’s true private preference and the gains reaped from social reputation by means of publicly displayed preferences. Since that trade-off depends on the observed frequency of a certain behavior in the collective, even small changes in that distribution might trigger sudden and disruptive changes in individual behavior which feed back to the overall distribution, eventually unravelling the formely deeply entrenched pattern.

Kuran’s deceptively simple argument in fact uncovers a fundamental difficulty in observing culture. The outside observer in many cases does not have direct access to private preferences, so that he does not know the degree how deep an observed pattern is actually rooted in individual values and cognitive processes. In fact, there need not exist any fundamental differences among the individuals since even slight deviations among individual preferences can cumulatively lead to large differences in collective behavior.[24] If we decide to call this collective pattern „culture“, the concept would no longer be related to cognition but only to an external effect of the complex dynamics of social preference articulation. Empirically, the consequence is that there need not exist a direct mapping between collective patterns and individual patterns, so that search for peculiar values and cognitive schemes would be futile. Obviously, this mechanism is very important for the analysis of economic systems. For example, societies may be corrupt because people perceive a certain degree of corruption that is beyond the threshold value stabilizing a low-corruption equilibrium of the frequency-dependent process. There would be no need to refer to internalized values fostering corruption like nepotism.

On the other hand, explaining the emergence of collective patterns is still based on a special assumption about the workings of human self-perception and hence on a cognitive phenomenon. In particular, although the pattern emerges as an phenomenon external to the individuals, the patterns causes behavioral changes which are channeled though the internal cognitive mechanisms of the individuals. This entails another paradox and obstacle in turning culture into a definitive concept: The trade-off between following one’s own way or the way of others can be culturally specific, too. Actually, we do observe different degrees of conformity and diverging opportunities for individual expression in different societies: Formally, that means that the position of threshold values in frequency-dependent processes might be dependent on culture as cognition. But this leads into an infinite regress crystallizing in the paradox of conforming to standards of conformity. Hence we are back with our original challenge.

Culture and social learning

Closely related to the phenomenon of self-perception is the process of learning from the behavior of others. If we start out from the reasonable assumption that individuals are never perfectly informed, we have to pay attention to the fact that they learn from observing the choices of others (Bhikchandi et al., 1992, 1997).[25] Similar to the complexities involved in Kuran’s approach, this process can display complex and multifarious dynamics. Yet the basic argument is simple again. Assume, for example, that we suffer from a lack of information regarding choice among certain alternatives, although we did accumulate personal experience. We may decide to observe the behavior of others, although we cannot observe their personal experience directly. In that case, we might decide against our own best knowledge if we are inclined to believe that the decisions of others are based on good reason and some better information. The crucial point in that story is that if a chain of decisions is analyzed, even slight deviations from private knowledge in single cases can change collective behavior, because the distribution of choices in the observed collective changes. The outcome of such a process depends critically on the specific way how information is accessible to the individuals and how information is transmitted in society.

Again, as outside observers we can treat this actually observed collective pattern as culture. In particular, we are inclined to talk about „culture“ if we feel to be better informed about the respective choices than the participant agents. For example, if we observe a certain women’s fashion that is definitively harmful to health, we call this a cultural phenomenon, but if we were convinced about its usefulness we would talk about its practical reason. This example shows that both the distinction between private and public preferences as well as the choices based on observation can work together: If I am not sure how a certain practice might affect my health, I may opt for following the herd, which at the same time raises my self-esteem. Uncertainty regarding private preferences therefore will increase the dynamic complexity of choices in a social context.

Thus, we can take up an argument that has been adduced frequently for moral norms in relation to rational opportunism: Culture may be a low-cost phenomenon in the sense that rational agents will follow the vagaries of herd behavior if they feel highly uncertain about the consequences of behavioral alternatives, and if there seem to be no high costs involved in opting for a specific alternative (Kliemt, ). Both the scenarios dicussed before do not need any special assumptions about cognitive schemes in order to produce collective phenomena that the observer will denote as „culture“.

Yet, at a closer look in the case of social learning, too, there are certain implicit assumptions which lead us back to culture. For example, the accessibility of private information of others might be determined by cultural standards regulating communicative behavior, or the weights attached to the observation of others might be culturally specific as in the case of “conformity” that we discussed before. Hence, we cannot avoid to tackle the question whether such cultural differences can be observed directly.

 

2.2           The impossibility of measuring cultural distinctiveness

The fundamental methodological question arises how to distinguish between collective phenomena and culture in terms of “real” differences between the individuals. There is a well-developed literature on this problem that is, however, often neglected by economists, although intensively used by researchers in international management studies. International value surveys in social psychology try to develop survey schemes that can be used as a yardstick in order to measure group related differences in attitudes and behavior. In that context, culture is introduced as a separate determinant of psychological features linked to social interaction.[26]

 

The dependence of measures of culture on culture

However, although these efforts have been successful in identifying many aspects of cultural distinctiveness, there are also strong indicators of an interaction between observer and observed object that raise serious doubts whether we have really „objective“ measures at hand. The most conspicious example so far is the development of the famous and much-used Hofstede survey schemes. Hofstede’s quantitative measures of cultural characteristics like „individualism/collectivism“ or „uncertainty avoidance“ have been enlarged to include a category of so-called „Confucian dynamism“ (see Hofstede, 1991). This category was proposed because in East Asian attitudes toward time and social obligation seem to be important for the peculiar „Asian“ cultural pattern to emerge on the macrosociological and macroeconomic level. In questionnaire surveys, East Asians seemed to be more inclined to pay attention to the long-run consequences of action whereas Westerners seemed to be more short-term oriented. One reason underlying this different performance was regarded to be a different moral attitude linked to Confucianism.

This change of the structure of the survey demonstrates how the very yardstick for the assessment of cultural differerences is endogenous to culture, too. There is no compelling reason why, for example, there could not exist a special category specific to Islamic peoples or African ones. The only explanation for the single inclusion of a „Confucian“ category is that Hofstede and other researchers simply did not pay attention to those groups because they are not as conspicious in the international economic arena as East Asians: success breeds theoretical curiosity: culture as surprising event. When defining survey questions and frames of reference, there is the problem that the questions proper can be dependent on the specific cultural background. In the context of Chinese value surveys, for example, researchers argued that a special value of „piety“ should be included which is meaningful for every Chinese, yet difficult to understand for Westerners (Ho, 1996). If researchers start to construct indirect questions that might serve as a test for identifying the impact of piety, there is no way to separate the interpretation of scenarios from the actual response. That is to say, perceptions of questions and outcomes in terms of replies are difficult, if impossible to disentangle.[27]

It is illuminating to observe that on the one hand research therefore led to the claims of establishing „indigenous psychologies“ of cultures, and that on the other hand the idea of modularization of values and behavioral patterns emerged (Yang, 1996). That means, cultural analysis cannot do without culturally specific analytical categories, so that eventually no universal frame of reference can be set up which allows a uni-dimensional comparison of cultures, not to speak about anything approaching quantitative measurement. At the same time, during the process of modernization culture dissolves into many elements that can be rearranged even on the individual level in order to produce many variants. For example, there can be a certain set of values in the professional life of an individual and another one in family life, where the former is highly „Westernized“ and the latter more traditional. Researchers would need to switch between perspectives in order to be able to grasp the meaning of such modular life styles. In post-modern individualism, this fact has been made a program for designing “life styles”.[28]

These sketchy thoughts only serve to demonstrate the fundamental methodological point that the observation and measurement of culture is not independent from culture. We do not wish to assess the positive conclusions regarding modernization, convergence of cultures and so on. Here we may be satisfied with the result that there is no objective measure possible. This can lead us eventually to reject the entire concept as not being amenable to scientific analysis, if we regard quantification and measurable causality as the bread and butter of serious research.[29]

 

The “black box” approach to culture

In spite of that methodological nihilism, we can go back to the starting point of this paper. Even if we cannot identify the impact of culture directly, we could still claim that we observe its effects on the level of kinds of data which are completely independent from cultural categories. In that regard, the example mentioned in the first paragraphs of this paper, namely the divergent transition experience, is a very difficult one to analyze because effects and causes cannot be separated in a clear fashion. If institutions are the central intermediating variable for explaining performance, culture and institutions would need to be distinguished already before empirical analysis could be started in a meaningful fashion. Since institutions are not independent from culture, analytical problems cannot be circumvented.

However, there seem to exist analytically much less demanding cases. One example can be found in the analysis of international trade and investment where many investigations have been realized in order to understand the direction and sequence of international transactions. Again, there is a clear difference between the attitudes of trade theorists in the narrow meaning and researchers in international business studies. Whereas the latter focused very early on the possible impact of „psychic distance“ on international transactions, the former hit upon related determinants only after a failure to apply core analytical categories like relative factor abundance on trade data. One of the most conspicious examples is the recent controversy over the impact of national borders on trade which began with the observation that neither does U.S.-Candian trade match the expectations derived from gravity equations nor does the law of one price work satisfactorily in its context.[30] The strength of the invisible determinants is the real surprise in that econometric work. For example, in a gravity approach based on states/provinces data there would be a very clear predominance of the North-South axis over the East-West axis in U.S. and Canadian international and domestic trade, but in fact one can observe just the opposite.

In our context, the surprising observation is that trade analysts do not refer to culture as a possible systematic determinant, given that fact that there are no substantial other barriers to trade. There are many results from disciplines other than economics that have proven how culturally distinct Americans and Canadians perceive themselves. In assessing that literature we would be back to our former problems in understanding culture via direct observation. Indeed, whereas political scientist Lipset (1987) emphasizes substantial differences in terms of values also with reference to the economy (e.g. regarding government intervention), in Hofstede‘s investigations Americans and Canadians seem to be very close to each other. However, since trade data can be interpreted easily and unequivocally, we may assume that here we have a proof of cultural distinctiveness, since most other possible determinants can be controlled almost like in an experiment. This is a clear case of the “black box” approach to culture – or is it?

Unfortunately, matters are not that easy. If we try to refer to observable data exclusively, we cannot differentiate between the impact of culture and the impact of knowledge about culture as opposed to other possible determinants of behavior. The argument is as simple as that: Imagine two groups with highly divergent cultures. In spite of the differences, both groups invest a lot of effort into mutual understanding so that eventually they are able to deal smoothly and efficiently with each other. That means, they successfully established a transcultural framework for transactions. In that case, observers would never discern any cultural impact on transactions even though cultural differences continue to be pronounced. So applying the “black box” approach presupposes a specification of the state of knowledge of the economic agents.

As a matter of fact, this problem has been investigated into in the case of U.S.-Canadian economic relations. As Engel/Rogers (1998) have demonstrated theoretically for the law of one price, there can be persisting deviations if two countries have separate retail distribution systems where competitors cannot enter the other market, for example, because of high sunk cost of entry. Interestingly, there is some empirical research in the cross-national retail sector starting out from the observation that U.S. retailers are pretty successful in Canada but not vice versa (O’Grady/Lane, 1996). Questionnaire surveys have led to the hypothesis that there are cultural causes of that phenomenon, but most decisive seems to be the degree of knowledge about the cultural differences. Canadian retailers were not successful if they started out from the belief that everything is similar in the U.S. as in Canada, just because they believed that both societies are similar. Because of high learning costs, many of them were not successful. Yet, if retailers prepare well, there is a much higher probability of successful entry. O’Grady and Lane call this observation the „psychic distance paradox“. In the U.S.-Canadian case, small cultural differences were multiplied because of a lack of information about them.[31]  On the other hand, performance could be better even in the case of large psychic distance because people invest a lot into being well prepared. However, this observation would not justify the conclusion that there are few cultural differences.

Therefore, we may conclude this section of the paper with the general statement that there is no conclusive method to distinguish analytically between culture and knowledge about culture on the basis of observable data. As long as the “black box” is not opened, the degrees of freedom are too large in order to be able to identify a single cause of the observed data.[32] But is we open the “black box”, we are back with all the difficulties with observing culture directly that we touched upon in former sections.

 

3.                Escape from the cultural conundrum: understanding the observation of culture

 

The arguments presented so far give the impression that culture might exist, but there is an indeterminancy problem: If we try to get hold of it, culture transforms itself and we cannot but return to the beginning. Culture is a paradoxical concept because perceiving culture is a cultural process for its part.[33]

I think that all these problems result from the misplaced assumption that culture is a property of our object of research. If culture is indeed not independent from the very process of observing culture, this starting point might be highly misleading. Instead, we may assume that culture is a property of the observer, or, more exactly, of the relation between observer and observed. This fits well to both the cognitive and the rational approach sketched above, since in both cases we referred culture to a pattern on a level above the constituent causes. For example, cognitive schemes are not „culture“, but presumably ordered patterns of schemes are “culture”. But then it follows immediately that these patterns can only be accessed via understanding the process of perceiving the patterns. Hence, the fundamental question has to be raised. Who observes and how?[34]

Looking into the mirror of culture

Subsequently, I wish to present the basic approach toward a new understanding of the role of culture in economic analysis. We start out from the basic triangle linking culture, behavior and institutions (fig. one), where we depict the general presumption that institutions and behavior are both embedded into culture. This reflects the fundamental problem how to distinguish between internalized values and incentives resulting from informal institutions. We do not assume a feedback loop to culture because this is a basic methodological premise in order to make sense of cause and effect. Otherwise, the triangle would simple collapse into one single concept of distinctiveness (individuality, singularity). This methodological starting point can be legitimized, for example, by referring to the distinction between different degrees of speed of change. If culture is defined as the determinant that changes with the least speed, the triangle would simply refer to certain time period that is shorter than the implicit time unit of cultural changes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Figure one: The cultural triangle

 

Between institutions and behavior, we assume a mutual causation similar to the scenario discussed in section 2. For example, in the Kuran framework we can observe a stable pattern of interactions (e.g. a religious ritual) that we treat as an institution, yet some changes of perception on part on the agents might trigger a sudden change of that institution.

The four forms of causality implied in figure one are related to basic analytical categories in the social sciences, i.e.:

*   institutions influence behavior via incentives/sanctions

*   behavior influences institutions via utility/interest

*   culture influences behavior via values/symbols

*   culture influences institutions via history/ideologies

Now we proceed with the simple assumption that „culture“ is introduced as a hypothesis of the observer trying to explain certain patterns on the level of institutions and behavior. Immediately we realize that there are different observers which are relevant for our analysis, if we distinguish between the two sides of the culture in question and its outside observer. If we take the Canadian example with reference to U.S. culture, then we distinguish:

*   The outside scientific observer – the trade theorist

*   The outside participant observer – Canadian retailers entering U.S. market

*   The inside learned observer – U.S. academics reflecting upon U.S. culture

*   The inside participant observers – domestic U.S. competitors of Canadian retailers

Each of the four groups observes the cultural triangle and may develop its own view of the interactions among the three constituents of the triangle.

In figure two, we analyze a subset of the possible interactions resulting from the fact that the four groups might communicate their views to each other or may get access to those views otherwise. This process takes place in the „mirror of culture“. The crucial point is that none of the four groups is able to identify the true workings of the triangle unless one was perfectly informed. If there is no a priori privileged position including science, culture can only be identified via the complex interaction of the different processes of observing the triangle. We might say that culture emerges as an observational category and can be described in more detail in observing the entire interaction taking place in the mirror of culture. This is visualized in figure two by means of introducing a second level scientific observer who analyzes the first level processes. Of course, this second level observation is facing logical and methodological problems similar to those on the first level. Hence the core question results to be how the second level process can be designed differently from the first level process in order to be able to find another way out of the cultural conundrum.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

Figure 2: The mirror of culture

 

Let us briefly explain the different interactions according to the numbers assigned to the arrows.

(1)            In the anthropological terminology this is the etic approach to the triangle. The outside scientific observer tries to explain the triangle according to universal categories. This is, for example, the Hofstede approach insofar as the questionnaires are not regarded as being culturally specific and the replies are simply processed quantitatively. The traditional economic approach to the analysis of individual choice is etic, too, insofar as preferences are regarded as being universal, stable and identical, and insofar as the observation of alternatives is not dependent on the position of the observer.[35]

(2)            Opposed to etic analysis is the emic approach. There are different alternatives, yet here we only refer to the explicit consideration of inside learned analysis in outside reconstructions of culture. This method is used frequently in the macro-analysis of economic systems, as when the „Confucian hypothesis“ is adduced in order to explain high growth rates in East Asia. Researchers mostly refer to inside descriptions of Confucian values e.g. according to Neo-Confucian thinkers and view at the triangle through that lense. As is well known, in that case etic analysis may cast doubt on the emic understanding when Neo-Confucian ideology is explained as merely reflecting political interests of the dominant classes, where “interests” are treated as human universals (power, wealth etc.).

(3)            The two alternatives mentioned before are mostly the only aspects in the mirror of culture which are made explicit in the debate on cultural issues in economic systems analysis. In contrast, we proceed with alternative 3 where the view of the outside observer is used by the inside learned observer in order to understand the triangle. Obviously, there is now the problem that the outside view can be either emic or etic. In the first case, there is the phenomenon of „inverse orientalism“, that means for example, Western views of the „Otherness of Japan“ are imported into Japanese scholarly works which are subsequently re-imported into the West (cf. Befu/Kreiner, 1992). In the second case, inside obervers might use the „enlightenment“ of scientific criticism to unmask ideological uses of culture in their own society. One of the foremost examples is Marxist analysis of the substructure/superstructure dualism, which simultaneously demonstrates that the outside scientific observer might not stay in an epistemologically advantaged position.

(4)            Of course, the inside learned observer develops her own view of the triangle. This is the so-called „indigenous“ perspective that we touched upon in the preceding section. There are radical statements of this position which argue that there can never be a full understanding of culture on side of the outside observer because he has not grown up inside that culture. As we see, this perspective can display a large variety of views reaching e.g. from indigenous scientific approaches to religious explanations of the triangle. In the latter case, there might even be no independent concept of „culture“, because a religious foundation of the institution-behavior complex is regarded to be based on absolute truths and absolute values.[36]

(5)            We turn to the participant outside observer, for example the businesswoman doing business in the foreign country. She develops her own understanding of the triangle, mostly supported by information obtainable in special journals, conversations with colleagues in hotel lobbies or training seminars. From the viewpoint of the scientific observer, here we frequently meet prejudices and stereotypes that serve to structure interactions and reduce uncertainty in spite of having no firm empirical foundation. Yet, these perceptions are important for our topic because they determine the actual transactions so that any measurement being based on scientifically created categories might be completely misleading. For example, if the Chinese were being proven to be very similar to the Japanese according to a certain standard value assessment procedure, this would not imply that interactions run smoothly because interaction is determined by the mutual perception of differences. If people believe that they are different, thus they are. This observation raises serious doubts about every approach to culture that compares cultures in isolation.

(6)            The outside participant observer might rely on scholarly advice when trying to understand the triangle. This advice, in turn, depends on whether the emic or the etic approach is chosen. There can be very complex ramifications, as for example, if reverse orientalism is fed back into a self-image of the inside learned observer that is afterwards translated back into some work of outside colleagues which is then processed in popular introductions into foreign cultures. A concrete example can be found in the indirect impact of sojourning scholars on the popular images of foreign cultures. Cultural mediators living in foreign countries sometimes enjoy the reputation of authenticity, although they actually create images of culture which are already adaptated to the foreign audience, albeit often unconsciously.

(7)            Symmetrically, the inside observer perceives his own way of living in assigning certain functions to the different aspects of the triangle. Here we also observe stereotypes e.g. of national and regional identity. These are important insofar as stereotypes determine actual behavior. In particular, on both the outside and the inside the problem of mutual seperateness is involved which strongly affects personal identity. That is to say, even if there is no other clearly discernible reason why the groups are different, the mere cause of creating identity may suffice to stabilize stereotypes (cf. Smith/Bond, 1993, pp. 77ff.). The inside perspective is also important for the generation of subcultures which are then fit into the moulds of the larger group identity. For example, disadvantaged groups might assign a certain role to themselves which at the same time legitimizes deprivation and provides an identity in terms of belonging to the larger group.

(8)            Inside self-perception can be mediated via the learned opinions of inside observers. For example, participant observers might view their own position according to religious views propagated by an intellectual elite. We have to note that both perspectives can differ, as in Kuran’s approach in explaining e.g. the Indian caste system. There can be a complex mix of perspectives in the way how a low-caste member views the mechanism how he is assigned to his position. Private views (7) can differ from public views (8), however adopting the latter may not simply be straigthforward social deceit, but may be deeply related to identity issues as explained in the former paragraph.

(9)            The outside participating observer can adopt the viewpoint of the inside observer. This process is commonly known as cultural assimilation and regarded as a problem not only in international management but also anthropology, provided that the outside observer is no longer able to detach himself from that perspective. Again, there are complex ramifications possible. For example, the process of assimilation can be influenced by the fact that the participant inside observer adopts (8) and that the learned inside observer adopts (3). If at the same time the outside scientific observer follows (2), then we confront a self-perpetuating system where everybody seems to agree on a certain image of culture where we cannot determine the exact point of origin.

(10)       The same can be said for the opposite direction. An interesting case in point are cross-cultural marriages which frequently suffer from problems of mutual understanding, in particular if contexts become specific to one of the sides of the relationship. However, the interaction of (9) and (10) can be interpreted as the emergence of a highly specific interactive “micro-metaculture” of the relation in which both sides consciously assign certain places and function for perceived cultural differences (Smith/Bond, 1993, p. 202f.).

We do not continue with the analysis of the mirror of culture, although there are important interactions left out of the picture, as for example the question how inside learned observers try to understand the viewpoint of inside participant observers. We pin down the result that in the mirror of culture there is no fixpoint because we can shift between the perspectives and because those perspectives can reflect other perspectives in a multi-faceted way. Culture is a pure observational phenomenon without any direct relation to the object of observation.

Let us now try to understand the way how culture can be analyzed and how this is related to our research strategies in the study of economic systems.

 

Understanding economic systems through the mirror of culture

In the mirror of culture, culture eventually emerges as a property of the complex reflections between the different observers. Although perhaps all the observers agree that there is a “thing” like culture in the triangle which they focus on, they are not able to observe but what is emerging in the dazzling reflections of the mirror of culture. On the level of scientific theorizing, we may say that there is an ontological presumption on culture, but at the same time we know that culture is a “Ding an sich” that we cannot approximate directly. In terms of our problématique of understanding economic systems that means: Although we are convinced that there is a cultural impact on their institutional configuration and economic performance, we will never be able to fix that impact unequivocally. This leads us back to the fundamental insight in our introductory considerations where culture has been linked to the singularity of economic systems. The singular cannot be explained via general statements. In that sense, there is a ring of truth in statements like “Japan is different”.[37]

However, the mirror of culture nevertheless opens a way how to get hold of the effects of that unaccessible thing of culture.[38] We only need to accept the assumption that all the observers process certain real-world experiences when acting in the context of the triangle. That is to say, everybody receives some kind of information about the elephant, however restricted, limited and indirect. Now, in the famous story about the four blind men touching and describing the elephant, they can progress toward reality if they start to communicate and try to reach some kind of mutual understanding about the shape of the thing they are not able to watch in its totality. The same can be imagined to happen among the four observers in the mirror of culture.

The only way how to get access to culture is to establish a systematic communicative process where people exchange their views about culture. This is akin to a process of translating and re-translating a piece of literature between four different languages where finally there is no fixpoint left. Yet, all the translators might nevertheless agree on a shared meaning of the text although after a while there is no longer any authoritative source claiming to offer the right meaning. In the same vein, culture may be the result of reaching mutual understanding among the four observers in the mirror of culture. However, the decisive step is the shift onto the next higher level of scientific observation. This is already included in figure two with a second outside mirror. Another position of the outside observer is introduced from where the process of mutual communication about culture is observed for its part. The possible consensus on culture is fixed here and described as the final hypothesis about culture as a determinant of reality. Of course, the process does not need to stop here because this result can be fed back onto the lower level so that a new round is started. Furthermore, this detached position can of course be adopted by any of the four observers.

There are many practical approaches to the actual implementation of such a research strategy in the study of economic systems. Perhaps this down-to-earth argument may clarify my point in the best way (for a related recommendation, see Lackner/Werner, 1999, pp. 49ff.). Take, for example, the assumption that there is a cultural determinant (like moral attitudes toward loyality) of supplier-producer relations in Japan, which are said to cause substantial differences in economic performance and process. These differences are directly relevant for policy matters because domestic competition policy as well as external economic relations are affected through the special problems of market access. Research design can be as follows.[39]

*   First, independent assessments of supplier-producer relations are collected via documents and other approaches to observation based on the respective isolated positions in the mirror of culture. These can be, for example, foreign newspaper reports about the problems of foreign firms accessing the Japanese market, or domestic accounts on legal disputes between Japanese firms.

*   Second, a mixed Foreign-Japanese research team is set up that conducts questionnaire surveys and interviews with foreign and Japanese managers working in Japan. The purpose is to identify reasons and perceptions of barriers to entry in supplier relationships.

*   Third, roundtable meetings on the same topic are held among Japanese and foreign managers which are documented in order to be processed afterwards by the research team.

*   Fourth, in a two step-procedure there are first separate meetings among the foreign and the Japanese researchers and managers respectively, which are followed by a concluding symposium with all the four groups participating. The final result is an assessment of the impact of culture on supplier-producer relations in Japan.

*   Fifth, this result as well as a detailed description of the whole process of achieving the result is presented to an independent researcher who tries to understand how cultural factors might have influenced the way leading to that result.

*   Sixth, that result is fed back to the four groups. They reflect about possible cultural impacts on the way how they agreed upon culture.

As we see, our abstract reasoning is easily amenable to feasible (alas, expensive) research designs. Furthermore, another result can be that the foreign managers learn to understand the supposed cultural determinant of supllier-producer relations and hence are able to cope with that factor in a way so that it might no longer be an impediment to entry. Just as we have mentioned in the context of the U.S.-Canadian case, knowledge about culture may eventually neutralize the impact of culture on economic processes without at the same time deleting cultural features of behavior.

Of course, the material input needed is much larger than in standard value analyses, not to speak of armchair theorizing on culture based on a certain knowledge about history. The study of economic systems would move very close to economic anthropology as applied on industrialized societies. What we have described is even a simple research design, because there would be a need for parallel processes involving Japanese participants and systematically varying participants from other countries: For example, a U.S.-Japanese research team might implement the same project design as a German-Japanese team. Only after the entire process would have been concluded, results would be put together and compared.

 

4.                Conclusion

 

Economists have turned their attention to concepts like values, norms, culture or cognitive schemes in order to better understand the working and performance of economic systems. However, as we have seen, there are strong epistemological and methodological arguments against the assumption that culture can be observed directly by any kind of “objective” instrument. The central thesis advanced in this paper is this one: We are only able to observe culture by means of observing the observation of culture. More exactly, the latter means that we try to understand the approaches of observers of economic systems who believe that there is something like “culture” working behind the phenomena which they perceive more or less directly.

The fundamental reason why this complex approach is necessary to fix culture empirically lies in the fact that culture can be equated neither with values nor cognitive schemes nor informal institutions. Culture is a pattern of these hypothetical constituents. However, patterns do not exist without an observer who perceives those patterns. This leads directly to our approach if we agree that there is no primordial observer. Hence, we need to reflect upon the way how different observers observe the pattern of culture, and we can establish settings where we learn about culture via analyzing the way how those different observers communicate their observations to each other.


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Zusammenfassung

In den letzten Jahren wird der Begriff der „Kultur“ wieder vermehrt verwendet, um Unterschiede in Institutionen und Leistung von Wirtschaftsordnungen zu erklären. Gleichzeitig wird der Begriff zunehmend kognitionstheoretisch fundiert. Bei näherer Betrachtung zeigt sich aber, daß im Rahmen einer Thematisierung von kognitiven Modellen und/oder informalen Institutionen „Kultur“ entweder eine redundante Kategorie ist, oder substantielle Paradoxa der Selbstbezüglichkeit in der wissenschaftlichen Analyse auftreten. Dies gilt auch für Versuche, „Kultur“ als „black box“ zu behandeln und nur „kulturfreie“ Daten zu berücksichtigen (wie Außenhandelsdaten). Es wird daher vorgeschlagen, Kultur als „Muster“ (von kognitiven Schemata oder informalen Institutionen) zu behandeln, das keiner direkten Beobachtung zugänglich ist, sondern nur als emergentes Phänomen der Beziehung zwischen Beobachter und Gegenstand, wie etwa einer Wirtschaftsordnung. Anhand einer genaueren Betrachtung dieses Prozesses der Beobachtung wird eine konkrete empirische Forschungsstrategie vorgeschlagen, um Kultur als Hypothese des wissenschaftlichen Beobachters zu entwickeln, die sich aus der Selbstbeobachtung ableitet.



[1]    The argument has been made forcefully by Panther (1997). Leipold (1999) agrees with his analysis of the different modes and speed of institutional convergence with the European Union and believes that policy makers commit grave mistakes if they do not pay attention to cultural impediments to convergence with West European standards. The theoretical archetype in recent debates has been produced by political scientist Samuel P. Huntington (1996, chapter 7). However, related considerations have already been made by much earlier authors like the German Müller-Armack in his research on the impact of religion on economic development.

[2]    In the debate over the „New Economic Geography“ à la Krugman, critical voices therefore emphasize the way how real-world “places” are shaped by history (Martin, 1999), and how human inventiveness and creativity – which in turn can be conceived as cultural phenomena – opens “windows of opportunity” that allow to break the prevailing mechanisms of economic growth (Boschma/Lambooy, 1999). A fascinating example for a complete cultural redefinition of geography is the Roman empire where the social invention of the legionary enabled the Romans to build a system of roads providing the infrastructural basis for the projection of Roman power. On this complex interaction between culture, social structure and infrastructural changes see Mann (1986).

[3]    Indeed, philosopher Bhaskar (1989) argues that if we accept a certain causal argument, by necessity we also have to accept that the presumed cause has an independent ontological status. Therefore many economists do not feel at ease with introducing culture, since they stick to an individualist ontology.

[4]    In many uses of the term “social capital” there seems to be no substantial difference to “culture”, as, for example, if social capital is intimately linked with values and trust, see Uslaner (1999). The implicit reason why often there is no direct reference to culture seems to be the tacit equation between culture and “national culture”, whereas the term “social capital” can also refer to small groups.

[5]    For example, Uphoff (1999) distinguishes between structural and cognitive forms of social capital, with both, however, being based on an “effective culture” (referring to instrumental ideas about social relations) and an “affective culture” (referring to ideas about social identity etc.). As we see, social capital finally seems to dissolve into pure mental phenomena, unless there is something in it which is tantamount to ontological autonomy (i.e. “existence”). This is precisely what Uphoff asserts without making the point explicit. He talks about “crystallization of ideas into roles, rules, networks” in order to separate social capital from its mental reflection, see Uphoff (1999, p. 221).

[6]    This is most evident in Putnam’s (1993) influential work on North Italian civic culture where there is a strong hypothesis on the long-run impact of early religious and community norms on modern economic growth. Although social capital can be dissected into its components, the ultimate explanation rests upon the way how those components interact. This interaction is highly specific in time and space.

[7]    There is even the other extreme, namely scholars analyzing culture without presenting any clear definition and conceptual boundaries, as in the much-quoted Jones (1995) paper. The reason mostly lies in the implicit assumption that culture is linked to particular nations or peoples, which goes back on nineteenth century romanticist-nationalist notions of “Volk”.

[8]    The most conspicious example is North’s (1990) book, where in spite of the fact that culture is nowhere analyzed in a systematic fashion, North assumes that norms and informal institutions are rooted in cultural traditions.

[9]    We note that the concept of „culture“ has been discarded for a long time in modern anthropological research just because of its elusiveness while at the same time operating as an essentialist term. In contemporary approaches like Wimmer (1996) “culture” is referred to dynamic processes of communicating over meanings which result into the demarcation of group boundaries. This is close to my approach, yet different because there is no explicit reflection about how culture can be observed and by whom. In economics, Dasgupta’s (1999) approach to culture seems to be close to Wimmer’s.

[10]   For example, in recent quantitative analyses of networks in international trade „Chineseness“ is introduced as a variable in gravity estimates, see e.g. Rauch/Trindade (1999). However, traditionally the networking features of “Chinese” trade were related to subethnic dialect groups and native region. Furthermore, in the recent decades fast change of social structures has taken place, with a constant rearrangement of possible networking relations. Therefore, as Menkhoff (1993) has already demonstrated convincingly, detailed studies of trading transactions do not show such a pronounced role of ethnicity in the narrow meaning.

[11]   In the above mentioned explanation of the diverging transition experience there is no clear idea how the historical heritage is reflected in individual behavior, and which are the intermediary determinants linking past and present. For example, there is no reference to child socialization, where even under Soviet communism certain elements of traditional religion might have survived via the grandparent- grandchild relation. This had been stressed in the “political culture” approach to Maoism in the 60s and 70s, see for a survey Herrmann-Pillath (1990). Parker (1990) is one of the rare references to childhood socialization, as well as Platteau’s (1994) account of the normative basis of the market order which he believes to be rooted in certain emotional attitudes developed during the early years.

[12]   If cognitive aspects are introduced into the analysis of rational choice, choice necessarily has to be regarded as being context-sensitive so that all the conventional assumptions about consistency, irrelevance etc. break down. A clear argument on this consequence is Priddat (1999).

[13]   In the literature on social capital there are many attempts at measurement, yet mostly futile. Suffice to mention the insurmountable difficulties in defining an appropriate aggregation procedure when facing the complex externalities involved in the formation of individual social capital (being a member of the mafia raises my social capital and destroys societal social capital). See Narayan/Pritchett (1999, pp. 279ff.). Woolcock (1998) distinguishes between two essential dimensions of social capital (embeddedness and autonomy) which add up in a complex fashion. Krishna/Shrader (1999) therefore argue that measurement has to be context-specific which precisely reflects all the difficulties that we discussed so far with culture.

[14]   For example, in Management Science the most influential work seems to be Hofstede’s (e.g. 1991). In the general economic literature, there is almost no mentioning of that. Economists mostly begin with quoting an appropriate definition of culture from anthropology and continue with their own argument.

[15]   Denzau/North (1994) introduce „shared mental models“. “Sharing” is mostly linked with the idea of a “common heritage”, although this historical perspective is not a necessary one. I should mention the fact that there are many related ideas that allow to establish bridges to cultural analysis without necessarily crossing these. One example is the concept of “common knowledge” in game theory. If this is linked to the concept of “focal points” selecting certain equilibria out of a set of multiple equilibria, we have a direct analogy to culture and history, because focal points need to have been emerged in the past and need to be common knowledge. Platteau (1994) gives a concise account of this argument.

[16]   This is implicit in theories on modernization that assume a spread of „Western Civilization“ across the globe because it is functionally best adaptated to the requirements of the modern economy and politics. See e.g. Eisenstadt (1987).

[17]   There is a way out of this cricular relation which we cannot discuss here because of lack of space. Culture could be linked to emotions, so that there would be a clear separation from cognitive phenomena. This is my own position in Herrmann-Pillath (2000), see also Herrmann-Pillath (1994). Economists have only very recently begun to include emotions into their framework, see for example Elster (1998) and Schlicht (1998, pp. 137ff.).

[18]   „Memes“ have been introduced by Dawkins (1989) , see also Delius (1989). However, the idea of a “cultural atomism” is much older and linked to anthropological traditions that posited themselves close to natural science. In these schools of thought, “cultural traits” assume a similar function like genes. For an extensive discussion of that tradition see Ingold (1986). Ingold confronts this “evolutionary” view with “history” as an holistic approach.

[19]   This is analogous to the universality of many emotions and emotional expressions, yet the contexts and trigger events might nevertheless differ in different societies. In recent research in cognitive psychology experiments demonstrated that people follow a sort of situational logic where their deductive reasoning is not guided by the abstract rules of propositional logic but by the particular meaning of the constituents making up the “definition of the situation”, see e.g. Ortmann/Gigerenzer (1997). However, at the same time people seem to select from a set of given procedures of reasoning.

[20]   For example, Voigt (1999) argues that formal institutions of the constitution are being based on particular informal institutions that shape the direction of constitutional change. Although he uses the distinction between “external” and “internal institutions”, sematic reference of tha latter seem to be almost identical with “informal institutions” because examples always mention values and norms. This approach is partly going back to Hayek’s concept of “spontaneous order” which is also closely related to the concept of “culture”.

[21]   This is North’s (1990) procedure, see Herrmann-Pillath (1993). For example, in Greif’s (1994) comparative account of Maghribi and Genoese traders the separation into “collectivist” and “individualist” societies takes place on the basis of different systems how to sanction deviant behavior (cheating), among other aspects of trade. Greif argues that the root of the difference lies in diverging “cultural beliefs” that govern the sharing of information with others, which leads to the emergence of different institutional solutions to the cheating problem in long-distance trade. However, the very process of sharing information can also be regarded as an informal institution, because presumably there are also different sanctions involved if information is not shared. This is a hen and egg problem, obviously.

[22]   This seems to be the major lacuna in Schlicht (1998) who proposes that “custom” is based on human universals of cognition, following the classical Gestalt psychology. However, if culture is a pattern built out of universal cognitive schemes (the “atoms” mentioned above), the question arises how these schemes can refer to themselves.

[23]   In economics, one of the first authors elaborating on the fundamental importance of that phenomenon is Schelling (1984). Provided that choices refer to a perception of the possible consequences on the relative position of the individual in a certain social setting, frequency dependency is always present and hence a fundmental gap between individual and collective phenomena. We should note that it is not possible to close this gap via the assumption that people might understand this and include frequency dependency into their decision calculus, unless there would be introduced either a system of complete and all-including communication or an exogenous decision maker.

[24]   This is a well-known property of non-linear systems, see Holt/Holt (1993). As Kuran also emphasizes, this means that cause and effect need not be of similar scale and dimension, so that very small variations of causes trigger large changes on the macro level. Hence, exact causal analysis has to rely on appropriate observation methods. Regarding culture, this argument can also be inverted. There can be cultural differences between individuals and groups that we cannot observe because we do not have the fine-grained observational tools at hand. Hence, we cannot realize the true causes of divergent macro-patterns.

[25]   We cannot discuss the important aspect that institutions of learning influence the patterns of behavioral change. Institutions of learning are, for example, the institutional opportunities to access information and to interact with other individuals. This is a major interface between cognition and institutions. See Goyal (1996). For a more general treatment of the interaction between institutions and preferences, see Bowles (1998).

[26]   It is interesting to note that in social psychology „culture“ seems to be an elusive term, too. Smith/Bond (1993, pp. 93ff.) straightforwardly apply the idea of “national cultures” even though their actual treatment of the phenomenon is much more differentiated.

[27]   For example Yeh/Lawrence (1995) demonstrate that the relation between „individualism“ and „Confucian dynamism“ is very complex and depends on the specific interpretation of both terms. Empirically, both seem to be closely correlated so that results depend on that interpretation. This can be related to the difficult problems in defining “individualism” independent from culture. Although the juxtaposition of “individualist” and “collectivist” cultures is most frequently used not only in economic research but also in social psychology (see e.g. Smith/Bond, 1993, but compare the more balanced statement in Bond, 1996), a strong case can be made that there are culturally specific expressions of “individualism”, too, which destroys the analytical basis for any naïve dualism. On the Chinese case, see my Herrmann-Pillath (1997).

[28]   On a more mundane level, studies in international business realize a complex interaction and mix of values emerging during the process of globalization which is called “crossvergence” by Ralston et al. (1997). However, since those studies can only fix the present, we have no clear idea whether change is an illusion because our perspective on the past might be misleading and oversimplified. We cannot interview historical persons with modern methods.

[29]   There is also the simple question, what is the purpose of measurement? Again looking at the social capital debate, there we have the idea whether “more” social capital leads to “higher” growth, see Knaack/Keefer (1997) who even call “trust” and “civic norms” “cultural variables”. However, nobody would accept the expression of “more culture” as meaningful unless the term would be used in the sense of “civilized”. As we see, measurement does only make sense if we were ready to accept a linear causality running from “quantities of culture” to certain economic outputs. Dasgupta (1999, pp. 394ff.) therefore simply asserts that we do not lose something important if social capital cannot be measured. The same is true for culture.

[30]   The most important contributions are Rogers/Jenkins (1995), McCallum (1995), Engel/Rogers (1996) and Helliwell (1997).

[31]   We cannot go into greater detail, but I should mention that there is also research on cognitive differences between Canadians and Americans in the narrow meaning of term, for example with reference to information processing, see Abramson et al. (1996).

[32]   This conclusion matches DiMaggio’s (1997) treatment of “culture” as a tool-box. That means, culture is being created out of context-sensitive and institution-guided uses e.g. of cognitive schemes by individuals. Thus, we need to understand how people learn to act culturally. However, the question remains open what are the general principles of this special kind of intelligent behavior. One approach is propsed by Schlicht (1998) who goes back to classical Gestalt psychology. For example, choice of cognitive schems might be dictated by criteria of clarity and consistency of the cultural pattern.

[33]   This conundrum is similar to the problem of infinite institutional regress that is scrutinized by Hodgson (1998, pp. 181ff.).

[34]   Dasgupta (1999, pp. 373ff.) takes a different yet related road when he first, does not define culture as “sharedness” but as difference in beliefs, and second rejects the search for culture as an explanatory variable but restricts himself to analyzing correlations between culture and other determinants and outcomes. There is only one step reaching my argument left: “Differences” have to be observed and recognized by somebody, because otherwise they make no difference in social interaction. Here we are.

[35]   On the etics/emics distinction, see the contributions to Headland et al. (1990). Although this is one of the fundamental methodological issues in anthropological research on culture, very few economists have paid attention to it. This is remarkable given the fact that there is a large literature on subjectivism and knowledge which can be easily related to the anthropological debate.

[36]   Although this is a radical view, one should stress that there is a reasonable point against any attempt at analyzing culture in context-free settings, like experimental approaches. Context-free settings seem to be preferable under the assumption that the impact of values can be discerbed without any interferences from the environment. However, if values and institutions are enmeshed in cultural cross-references, this must be completely misleading. Only context-laden settings present choices with real consequences and hence realistic behavior. If this is the case, there is indeed a point in the argument that we cannot fully understand culture without actually being able to experience the context. Yet, on the other hand this observation supports the inclusion of “Verstehen” approaches to culture. Then “Verstehen” does not mean to penetrate an interior state of mind but to reconstruct the meaning contexts and situations, on this see Langlois/Csontos (1993).

[37]   I should stress that this problem has been discussed in great detail and depth following the “Historismus” controversy in Germany. Many solutions have been proposed which deserve to be taken up again, rewritten and further developed in a modern terminology, in particular regarding the relation between “individual characteristics” and “general theory” (for some hints, see Finch, 1997). Crucial concepts in that debate were those of “type” (“Typus”) and “style” (“Stil”) which were used in a different fashion by authors like Max Weber, Spiethoff or Eucken. All of them try to find a balance between acknowledging the singularity of economic systems and explanation by means of hypotheses. Today, there are some attempts at revinving those concepts, albeit without the rigour of the elder uses, see for example Schefold (1994) and Klump (1996). For more detail, see Herrmann-Pillath (2000, chpts. 1, 2 and 7).

[38]   There is no room for making explicit the many connections to the ongoing anthropological discourse. My argument is related, for example, to Ingold’s (1993) discussion of “translation”.

[39]   Fortunately, this example is not simply invented because there is already research on Japan organized partly in that way, see Kotabe/Wheiler (1996). One illuminating result of that study is that American and Japanese managers of American firms operating in Japan perceive the competitive environment differently, even if the Japanese had been working and living a long time in the United States.