Dr Miran Bakhsh, Dr. Hassan Mehmood Raja, Dr. Zara Riaz
This research assessed the consistency of cognitive and affective domains with respect to moderate relationship strength between hep extending motives and attitudes for poor on a total of 198 participants in order to measure their feelings for the poor (affective domain) and believes about the poverty causing elements (cognitive domain). Cognitive-affective consistency moderates the degree of the attitudes, which help in the prediction of the allocation of welfare, volunteering to assist and help the poor. These attitudes also significantly predict the participant’s decisions who possesses feelings for the poor and believes in the elements causing poverty. Keywords: Attitudes, Poverty, Believe, Cognitive, Affective, Consistency, Attribution and Poverty.