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Would you pass the wallet test? World's most honest cities revealed

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Would you pass the wallet test? World's most honest cities revealed after researchers dropped purse containing £30 to see if it would be returned



Test by Reader's Digest dropped wallets in 16 cities worldwide and counted how many were given back
Helsinki in Finland topped the survey, handing back 11 of 12 wallets, while only one was returned in Lisbon, Portugal
New York was joint third while London came joint ninth in the test

It is a classic conundrum and a yardstick of morality - if you found an abandoned wallet, would you give it back?

But while everyone would have their own reasons for keeping or returning a lost item, a new study has revealed which cities worldwide have the best record for acts of honesty.

A total of 16 cities - including New York, London and Mumbai - were put to the test when 12 wallets were dropped in prominent places containing family photographs, contact details and the equivalent of £30 in cash.

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Moral quandry: Wallets containing personal items and £30 cash were dropped in cities around the world

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Centre of honest: Helsinki topped the study by returning 11 of the 12 wallets left there


Of the 192 wallets, just under half were returned, but the results varied strikingly from city to city in the study, commissioned by Reader's Digest.

Finnish capital city Helsinki returned 11 of its wallets, while in Lisbon, Portugal, only one of the wallets was returned - by a couple on holiday from Holland.

Interestingly, the study, which will feature in the October issue of the magazine, showed that whether a place was rich or poor had no effect on whether people kept the money or not.

Mumbai in India scored second-best in the study by returning nine of the 12 wallets, despite the fact that the 3000 rupees they each contained would go a lot further than 43 francs in wealthy Zurich, Switzerland, where only four were returned.

Closer to home, London came joint ninth of the 16 cities tested, returning only five of 12 wallets - the same result as Warsaw in Poland and one worse than Berlin in Germany.

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The people carrying out the study also found that age and gender were no predictors of honesty, as men, women, children and pensioners kept and returned wallets in equal measure.

Lasse Luomakoski, a 27-year-old student who returned a wallet in Helsinki, thought that her people were naturally disposed to be honest.

He said: 'Finns are naturally honest, it’s typical for us. We are a small, quiet, closely-knit community.

we have little corruption and we don’t even run red lights.'

Vaishali Mhaskar, a mother of two, returned a wallet left in the Mumbai general post office and said: 'I teach my children to be honest, just like my parents taught me.'

Occasionally people made attempts to return the wallets then gave up - a woman in Bucharest asked two passers-by whether they owned it before taking it for her own.

A emergency worker in Moscow described it as his professional duty to give it back, and handed the wallet to a security guard.

He said: 'I am an officer and I am bound by an officer's ethical code.
'My parents raised me as an honest and decent man.'

However, being in uniform did not guarantee a sense of duty - in Zurich one wallet was taken and kept by a tram driver - despite the fact that Zurich's tram system runs a city-wide lost and found service.

However, there were many instances of outright dishonesty reported. One man picked up a wallet, looked inside and immediately climbed into a flash Mazda and drove off.

A male New Yorker found the money and marched straight into a convenience store to emerge with a stash of cigarettes.

But in a heart-warming exception, reporters followed a elderly man in Amsterdam into a liquor store after he picked up the wallet - only to find he had asked the shop attendant to phone the number inside to have the wallet returned.

Catherine Haughney, editor of Reader’s Digest, said: 'It is truly inspiring to see that there are so many honest people in the world.

'And most of all, that honesty is valued among young and old, men and women, poor and rich in very different cultures.'

REVEALED: THE MOST HONEST AND DISHONEST CITIES IN THE WORLD

1. Helsinki, Finland - 11 out of 12 wallets

2. Mumbai, India - 9 out of 12

=3. Budapest, Hungary - 8 out of 12

=3. New York City, USA - 8 out of 12

=5. Moscow, Russia - 7 out of 12

=5. Amsterdam, Netherlands - 7 out of 12

=7. Berlin, Germany - 6 out of 12

=7. Ljubljana, Slovenia - 6 out of 12

=9. London, UK - 5 out of 12

=9. Warsaw, Poland - 5 out of 12

=11. Bucharest, Romania - 4 out of 12

=11. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - 4 out of 12

=11. Zurich, Switzerland - 4 out of 12

14. Prague, Czech Republic - 3 out of 12

15. Madrid, Spain - 2 out of 12

16. Lisbon, Portugal - 1 out of 12

Read more: Helsinki responds best and Lisbon worst to the honest city test that plants wallet containing £30 and a family photo in public places | Mail Online
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
 
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LOL I'm laughing at Spain & Portugal pathetic score... Bankrupt losers
 
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I wouldn't have guessed that Mumbai would fare so well and Zurich so poorly, a real surprise. Different cities in India might show vastly different result though.
 
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I wouldn't have guessed that Mumbai would fare so well and Zurich so poorly, a real surprise. Different cities in India might show vastly different result though.

We are still doing some progress since we have more than 70% honest people in India. Rest 25- 30 % or so, no need to say who are they !!!
 
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We are still doing some progress since we have more than 70% honest people in India. Rest 30 %, no need to say who are they !!!

Unfortunately the politicians are from that 30%. :(

Anyways we should be thankful that they didn't do this in Delhi, instead of Mumbai. :lol:
 
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I've returned or turned in lost wallets, phones, ID cards, etc before because I would want someone to do the same if I ever lost the aforementioned items. It is the right thing to do.
 
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Those 3 unreturned wallets are with Congress activists. Dont conduct such surveys near congress' offices please.
 
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12 people don't justify millions.

I doubt their was random sampling. You can do the same experiment in different parts of New York with different results each time.
 
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That's why i always use cards and not cash....wouldn't want to loose it Portugal.
 
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Unfortunately the politicians are from that 30%. :(

Anyways we should be thankful that they didn't do this in Delhi, instead of Mumbai. :lol:

Ye kya locah hai?
Dilli walon ne aap ke bhains khol li kya?
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around or 9 yrs back I found a wallet in Pune (travelling During Ganpati Festival) it had almost 5k rs, 26K self-check, 2 credit cards. 2 pictures and few visiting cards. I was tempted to go to bank get cash and throw a party. But finally decided to return it. I called the person (Nasik No.)after confirming that wallet belongs to him, took his home address and couriered it to his address. Paid 28 Rs as courier charges. In return he call me and shown his anger that his wallet had 6700 Rs not 5k... what a moron he was ..:hitwall:

It was a shocker to me and my belief .... I got annoyed ..but finally I said to myself, "neki kar darya me daal"
 
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Amsterdam, Netherlands - 7 out of 12

My wallet once fell out of my pocket at the Central station and I was tapped on my shoulder behind me by someone who gave it back to me. I think he was of Pakistani origin. I doubt my wallet would have been returned to me if it was one of those notorious North-African youth or Roma gypsies. On the other hand I have seen some white people shamelessly pick up money from a crashed armoured truck. Thieves and opportunists come in all shapes and colours.
Besides, this study and the article which covers it, is total nonsense. It has a pre-selection of certain cities and makes a general conclusion about the world. Moreover, the survey is fundamentally flawed. The probable size of the sampling error can usually be controlled by taking a large enough sample of the population. Twelve individuals hardly seem representative for millions.
 
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With this logic I can drop my wallet in Compton 3 times, and then claim America is the most unfriendly nation in the world.
 
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i am surprised..
paisa kitna bhi ho,kam hi lagta hai.
 
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Not a surprise that Mumbai is 2nd on the list, 3000 rupees is a lot of money in India, this is a pretty good survey actually.
 
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