Title: DG SANCO
1 Conference How Can Behavioural Economics
Improve Policies Affecting Consumers? Brussels,
28th November 2008 Thoughts on behavioural
economics and consumer regulations Matthew
Rabin, University of California, Berkeley
2Conference questions
- Are we yet in a position to integrate this stuff?
- Does Behavioural Economics (BE) call for more
interventionism? Less? Where? - What next? Research and policy tools?
3Questions for me
- Main insights from BE
- Can BE serve to complement survey data?
- Robust enough for application now?
- More for some markets than others?
4The postulates of Neoclassical Economics
- Perfect competition
- Perfect information
- Perfect rationality
- (e.g., self-regarding preferences, time
consistent preferences)
5How neoclassical economics tenets were relaxed
over time
- 1930s perfect competition
- gt monopolistic and oligopolistic models
- 1970s perfect information
- gt asymmetric information
- 1990s perfect rationality
- gt bounded rationality
6Nobel Laureates
- 2002 Kahneman
- "for having integrated insights from
psychological research into economic science,
especially concerning human judgment and
decision-making under uncertainty" - 2002 and Smith
- "for having established laboratory experiments
as a tool in empirical economic analysis,
especially in the study of alternative market
mechanisms"
7Behavioural Economics (BE)
- BE studies how people actually make choices
- It "increases the explanatory power of economics
by providing it with more realistic foundations"
(Camerer, 2003).
8BE, main insights
- Many, but many specific errors, too
- More relevant discussing the underlying
principles and the big emerging theme - Ill illustrate with specific error bias in
predicting future tastes
9BE, main insights (2)
- Main principle for regulation help people
achieve their own goals - Take a set of options x, y, (e.g., say
Adjustable Rate Mortgage and Fixed Rate Mortgage) - Consider regulation when reason to believe
consumers commonly choose x even though they want
y. - A first test any way to them to choose y? If
people seem to want x no matter what, shouldnt
be in business for promoting y.
10BE, main insights (3)
- A useful framing of BE findings revealed
preference fails because choice varies with the
situation (see the Experiment carried out with EU
Consumer Policy officials) - Most (not all) behavioural phenomena in
environment A people choose x from x, y in
environment B, y from x, y, whereas
conventional rational choice says choices should
be the same. Present bias, framing effects,
hot/cold gap, etc. - Want borrelnoten now? Borrelnotten 7 days from
now? - Value for car while with salesperson? Next
morning?
11Preferences
- Must use something beyond traditional economic
notion of preferences to find which choices, if
any, reveal true goals. - Let consumers choose simply not sufficient for
evaluation of well-being - Use BE principles to make guesses based on
peoples behaviour and other information (as to
what choice, across a variety of environments,
best represent true preferences.
12BE intervention
- General principle of BE intervention use light
paternalism to affect when and how people choose
from x, y, not limiting choice to y. - Prospective choice better than immediate choice
when there is present bias if I want candy or
cocaine, make me choose ahead of time - considered choice vs. empathetic choice
13BE intervention (2)
- Letting people choose from x, y generally
better than imposing y. This can accommodate
heterogeneity in tastes and in degree of
rationality. - When done right, it can encourage those who
should be doing y but mistakenly dont do so,
while letting those who wisely choose x still do
so. - E.g., prospective choice and self-control making
people who want to drink gin or eat candy at 2am
decide before 11pm. Lets those who really want to
plan for it, but those who dont really want to,
not do it at the last minute.
14Why intervention?
- Because market may deliver one way of choosing x
vs. y, rather than what BE theories suggest best
way of choosing x vs. y - E.g., free market sells people things whenever
want - Tempting good consumed according to immediate
preferences, not prospective preferences. - Durable goods bought when most enthusiastic, not
under true long-range average enthusiasm
15Why intervention? (2)
- NOTE burden is greater than observing that
market provides context A, but that a BE theory
tells us B would be better. - Must think through logic if our theories are
really right, why wouldnt the market provide B? - Specific class of error and intervention
illustrates
16Mispredicting Preferences
- 2 ways tastes change over time
- Temporary Fluctuations (moods, cues )
- Adaptation (paraplegia, standard of living),
addiction. - Evidence people under-appreciate (even very
predictable) changes in their tastes, and hence
falsely project their current tastes onto the
future (e.g., shopping on an empty stomach leads
people to buy too much). - Lots of examples and relevant for consumer
policy. Peoples preferences fluctuate. - Fluctuations can be exogenous (e.g., random
moods) or might be endogenous/market-induced
(e.g., sales jobs, advertising )
17Example of fluctuating preferences
- Nice simple experiment, dramatic context
- BBGJLM (2007) studied 13 long-time adult heroin
addicts who had regularly receiving BUP, a
medication - Over an 8-week period, each subject was asked
whether s/he would prefer each of 12 different
amounts of money (ranging from 0 to 100) to a
second dose, after receiving the initial dose. - IC Subjects were told that one of their choices,
randomly selected, would be implemented. Hence,
they had the incentive to choose according to
their true incentives.
18Example of fluctuating preferences (2)
- Deprived (2 hours before scheduled dose) and
satiated (rights after dose) addicts asked for
their willingness to pay for the 2nd dose today
or 2nd dose for 5 days hence. - Average value of an additional dose
- When they would get the dose
- Today 5 days from now
- Current Deprived 75 60
- Craving Satiated 50 35
- These expressed willingness to pay are for the
exact same circumstances by highly experienced
addict. The rational choice would be identical
prices.
19Example of fluctuating preferences (3)
- 21 ratio of prices Willingness-To-Pay for BUP
depending on when ask. Cant use the revealed
preference approach. - Which is the true preference?
- BE principles say it is probably the 35 that is
most accurate reflection of her true experienced
well-being. - Not because drugs are bad and this is the lowest
(present bias says 2nd column better than 1st,
and projection bias says bottom row better than
top - What would unregulated market provide?
- Probably a combination of everything except the
35!
20More topical examples
- Consumers currently excited by a product, either
because theyll enjoy first day, or successful
salespersonship. - Example of a class of regulation Cooling-off
periods encourage persistent choice (for
irreversible or hard-to-reverse decisions with
long-term consequences, only allow implementation
if made at more than one moment in time. - Oversimplifying
- Markets consumers pay up to the highest WTP
- Right thing in many cases the lowest WTP
- E.g. Cooling-off / persistent choice
- Reminder for rational guys, lowesthighest, so
little harm!
21Final remarks
- PERSISTENT CHOICE is superior to either bans or
enforcing all markets contracts. Marriage,
suicide, durable goods, jobs, tattoos, etc. - OF COURSE this may come at a cost. But when no
serious cost to consumer or firm from delaying
choice, little harm. - CRUCIAL NOTE foregone sales, because consumers
want to back out, does not properly count as
economic cost to firm in this case this only
happens when it is a sale that should not take
place.
22ThanksMatthew Rabin University of California,
Berkeley