Toddlers treat rich people better than poor people. They were less helpful and less positive with poor people suggesting they already show a bias against poor people. It’s likely they behave differently toward the poor because they pay more attention to how their caregivers behave toward the poor.

https://www.psychologytoday.com/au/blog/psychology-tomorrow/202409/toddlers-treat-rich-people-better-than-poor-people

3 Comments

  1. I’ve linked to the news release in the post above. In this comment, for those interested, here’s the link to the peer reviewed journal article:

    https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2025-19881-003

    From the linked article:

    Toddlers Treat Rich People Better Than Poor People

    New research shows that children start to favor rich people from a young age. Why?

    A new study traces the origins of this attitude. The shocking findings suggest that one-and-a-half-year-old toddlers already show a preference for people they recognize as rich. They are also more likely to help richer individuals.

    The study compared 11- to 13-month-old and 14- to 18-month-old toddlers on both a helping task and an evaluation task. While the younger age group (around one year) did not show any preference either in evaluation or in the helping task, the slightly older age group (which included toddlers as young as 14 months old) systematically preferred rich people.

    The comparison with the younger age group also gives us some clues about whether this effect is driven by a positive attitude towards rich people or a dislike of poor people. It seems that it’s the latter.

    The one-and-a-half-year-olds were not more helpful towards, or more positive about, rich people than they were half a year ago. But they were less helpful and less positive when it came to poor people. So a more accurate take-home message of these studies might be that one-and-a-half-year-olds already show a bias against poor people.

    Here, it is crucially important to note that toddlers start to differentiate between rich and poor between 14 and 18 months, which is exactly the age when social cognition abilities start to develop. So a much more plausible way of tracing the origins of this differential attitude towards the rich and the poor is that toddlers are heavily influenced by how their caregivers react to rich and poor people. One-year-olds are much less sensitive to how their caregivers treat and react to others than one-and-a-half-year-olds.

    To put it very simply, it’s likely that 18-month-olds behave differently toward the poor because they pay more attention to how their caregivers behave toward the poor. A lot has been written about how people’s class and socioeconomic status influence our behavior in subtle ways—often in ways we are not even aware of.

  2. AllanfromWales1 on

    A problem I have with this is that the report does not give details of the society in which the children tested live. Attitudes to poverty are not (or don’t appear to be) consistent around the world, so this does matter.

  3. ThothTheHermetic on

    But the very poor on average also smell different, talk different, act different. How can a toddler treat them the same?