Journal article
Support for behavioral nudges versus alternative policy instruments and their perceived fairness and efficacy
Peter John, Aaron Martin, Gosia Mikolajczak
REGULATION & GOVERNANCE | WILEY | Published : 2023
DOI: 10.1111/rego.12460
Open access
Abstract
An extensive debate has emerged in recent years about the relative merits of behavioral policy instruments (nudges) aimed at changing individual behavior without coercion. In this article, we examine public support for non-deliberative nudges and deliberative nudges and compare them to attitudes toward top-down regulation and free choice/libertarian options. We also examine whether support for both types of nudges is associated with perceptions of fairness and efficacy. We test these expectations with a survey experiment with 1706 UK adult respondents (representative of the population on age, gender, and location) in two policy areas (retirement savings and carbon offsets for airline passeng..
View full abstractGrants
Funding Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Stanley Feldman and Peter Loewen for their comments on the experimental design. We acknowledge the financial support of the Policy Lab at the University of Melbourne.