Partner Choice and Morality: Preference Evolution under Stable Matching
We present a model that investigates preference evolution with endogenous matching. In the short run, individuals' subjective preferences simultaneously determine who they choose to match with and how they behave in the social interactions with their matched partners, which result in material payoffs for them. Material payoffs in turn affect how preferences evolve in the long run. To properly model the "match-to-interact" process, we combine stable matching and equilibrium concepts. Our analysis unveils that endogenous matching gives rise to the "we is greater than me" moral perspective. This perspective is underpinned by a preference that exhibits both homophily and efficiency, which enables individuals to reach a consensus of a collective ``we" that transcends the boundaries of the individual "I" and "you." Such a preference stands out in the evolutionary process because it is able to force positive assortative matching and efficient play among individuals carrying the same preference type. Under incomplete information, a strong form of homophily, which we call parochialism, is necessary for a preference to prevail in evolution, because stronger incentives are required to engage in self-sorting with information friction.
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