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Good karma for me, bad karma for you: Study reveals the psychology behind our karmic bias

May 02, 2025 10:47 AM IST

A new study reveals how we view karma differently for ourselves and others, crediting ourselves for good deeds but blaming others for misfortune. Here's why.

Karma is a belief many people hold close, the idea that good deeds bring rewards and bad ones invite punishment. But according to a new study published in Psychology of Religion and Spirituality, we tend to apply this belief differently depending on who we’re thinking about. When it comes to ourselves, we’re more likely to credit our successes to good karma. But when others face setbacks, we often assume they’re paying the price for past misdeeds. (Also read: Do you frequently argue with your partner? Ask them these 4 questions that can change the way you approach conflicts )

Research shows self-serving bias in karma beliefs across cultures and contexts. ( Adobe Stock)
Research shows self-serving bias in karma beliefs across cultures and contexts. ( Adobe Stock)

Karma through a biased lens

The researchers proposed that two competing psychological motivations shape our beliefs about karma: the desire for a just world (where wrongdoers are punished) and a self-positivity bias (our need to see ourselves in a good light). These forces influence whether we focus on karmic punishment or karmic reward and for whom.

Karma is the spiritual principle that a person's actions, good or bad, will determine their future experiences or outcomes.(Pixabay)
Karma is the spiritual principle that a person's actions, good or bad, will determine their future experiences or outcomes.(Pixabay)

To test their theory, they asked over 2,000 participants to recall a karmic event in either their own lives or someone else’s. In the first study, conducted in the U.S. with 478 participants who all believed in karma, 86% chose to write about their own experiences. Among those, 59% described positive events as rewards for their good actions. But when it came to others, the script flipped: 92% of those who recalled karmic experiences involving someone else described negative outcomes.

Cultural differences in karmic thinking

In a second, larger experiment with more than 1,200 people, including participants from the U.S., Singapore, and India, the results echoed the first study. Nearly 70% of those writing about themselves reported positive karmic outcomes, while only 18% said the same about others. Sentiment analysis of the stories showed that self-related karmic events were described using more positive language.

Interestingly, this self-favoring bias was slightly less pronounced in the Indian and Singaporean participants compared to those from the U.S. This aligns with previous research suggesting that people in Western cultures often lean toward viewing themselves in an overly positive light, while Asian cultures tend to foster more self-critical perspectives.

How karma helps us make sense of life

Ultimately, White’s research reveals how supernatural beliefs like karma serve psychological needs. “Thinking about karma allows people to take personal credit and feel pride in good things that happen to them, even when the cause isn’t clear,” she explained. “At the same time, it lets them justify the suffering of others as deserved.”

This mental framing satisfies two deep-seated human desires: to see ourselves as morally good and deserving of success and to believe that justice exists in the world. When rational explanations fall short, karma steps in to fill the emotional and cognitive gap helping people make peace with both fortune and misfortune.

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Catch your daily dose of Fashion, Taylor Swift, Health, Festivals, Travel, Relationship, Recipe and all the other Latest Lifestyle News on Hindustan Times Website and APPs.
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