
Freakonomics Radio The U.S. Is Just Different — So Let’s Stop Pretending We’re Not (Ep. 469 Replay)
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Aug 4, 2022 Michelle Gelfand, a renowned cross-cultural psychologist, and Joe Henrich, an expert in human evolutionary biology, dive deep into the intricacies of American cultural identity. They discuss the concept of 'tight' versus 'loose' cultures, revealing how America's unique traits impact everything from policy adoption to social behaviors. The conversation touches on COVID-19's different effects based on cultural rigidity and employs a humorous Muppets analogy. They also critique the dominance of Western perspectives in psychology, advocating for a broader understanding of human behavior.
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Tight vs. Loose Cultures
- Michelle Gelfand's research categorizes cultures as "tight" or "loose" based on adherence to social norms.
- Tight cultures have stricter rules and stronger disapproval of norm violations, while loose cultures are more permissive.
Threat and Cultural Tightness
- Chronic threats like natural disasters or invasions correlate with tighter cultures due to the need for coordination.
- The U.S., with relatively low chronic threat, is a looser culture.
COVID-19 and Culture
- A Lancet study shows tighter cultures had fewer COVID cases and deaths than looser cultures.
- This suggests cultural tightness correlates with better pandemic response.









