Free to choose or free to lose? Understanding individual attitudes toward paternalism

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Standard

Free to choose or free to lose? Understanding individual attitudes toward paternalism. / Lassen, David Dreyer; Mahler, Daniel.

I: Behavioural Public Policy, Bind 7, Nr. 3, 2023, s. 721-743.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lassen, DD & Mahler, D 2023, 'Free to choose or free to lose? Understanding individual attitudes toward paternalism', Behavioural Public Policy, bind 7, nr. 3, s. 721-743. https://doi.org/10.1017/bpp.2022.39

APA

Lassen, D. D., & Mahler, D. (2023). Free to choose or free to lose? Understanding individual attitudes toward paternalism. Behavioural Public Policy, 7(3), 721-743. https://doi.org/10.1017/bpp.2022.39

Vancouver

Lassen DD, Mahler D. Free to choose or free to lose? Understanding individual attitudes toward paternalism. Behavioural Public Policy. 2023;7(3):721-743. https://doi.org/10.1017/bpp.2022.39

Author

Lassen, David Dreyer ; Mahler, Daniel. / Free to choose or free to lose? Understanding individual attitudes toward paternalism. I: Behavioural Public Policy. 2023 ; Bind 7, Nr. 3. s. 721-743.

Bibtex

@article{80cf80c2777c4a0aac81f62cc49c424d,
title = "Free to choose or free to lose? Understanding individual attitudes toward paternalism",
abstract = "In the past decades, behavioral economics has credibly identified numerous decision-making biases leading people to make choices they would not have made if better informed about the long-term consequences of their actions. This has given rise to a new reason for government interventions: internalities. In contrast to traditional reasons for government intervention, such as redistribution and externalities, overcoming internalities often involves the use of paternalistic policies. We investigate theoretically and empirically the formation of attitudes toward paternalistic policies. Theoretically, we focus on the role of self-interest and distinguish between self-interest as construed for the rational decision-maker, self-interest when self-control problems are present, and self-interest when procedural or expressive elements, such as autonomy, matter. Empirically, we employ two novel data sets: a Danish survey on political opinion combined with administrative data on actual behavior and a large-scale cross-country survey to analyze attitudes toward paternalistic policies in the health and financial domains. We show that targets of paternalism are more opposed to paternalism than non-targets both in Denmark and across nine Western democracies and rely on our theoretical priors to explore mechanisms that can explain these attitudes.",
author = "Lassen, {David Dreyer} and Daniel Mahler",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1017/bpp.2022.39",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
pages = "721--743",
journal = "Behavioural Public Policy",
issn = "2398-063X",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Free to choose or free to lose? Understanding individual attitudes toward paternalism

AU - Lassen, David Dreyer

AU - Mahler, Daniel

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - In the past decades, behavioral economics has credibly identified numerous decision-making biases leading people to make choices they would not have made if better informed about the long-term consequences of their actions. This has given rise to a new reason for government interventions: internalities. In contrast to traditional reasons for government intervention, such as redistribution and externalities, overcoming internalities often involves the use of paternalistic policies. We investigate theoretically and empirically the formation of attitudes toward paternalistic policies. Theoretically, we focus on the role of self-interest and distinguish between self-interest as construed for the rational decision-maker, self-interest when self-control problems are present, and self-interest when procedural or expressive elements, such as autonomy, matter. Empirically, we employ two novel data sets: a Danish survey on political opinion combined with administrative data on actual behavior and a large-scale cross-country survey to analyze attitudes toward paternalistic policies in the health and financial domains. We show that targets of paternalism are more opposed to paternalism than non-targets both in Denmark and across nine Western democracies and rely on our theoretical priors to explore mechanisms that can explain these attitudes.

AB - In the past decades, behavioral economics has credibly identified numerous decision-making biases leading people to make choices they would not have made if better informed about the long-term consequences of their actions. This has given rise to a new reason for government interventions: internalities. In contrast to traditional reasons for government intervention, such as redistribution and externalities, overcoming internalities often involves the use of paternalistic policies. We investigate theoretically and empirically the formation of attitudes toward paternalistic policies. Theoretically, we focus on the role of self-interest and distinguish between self-interest as construed for the rational decision-maker, self-interest when self-control problems are present, and self-interest when procedural or expressive elements, such as autonomy, matter. Empirically, we employ two novel data sets: a Danish survey on political opinion combined with administrative data on actual behavior and a large-scale cross-country survey to analyze attitudes toward paternalistic policies in the health and financial domains. We show that targets of paternalism are more opposed to paternalism than non-targets both in Denmark and across nine Western democracies and rely on our theoretical priors to explore mechanisms that can explain these attitudes.

U2 - 10.1017/bpp.2022.39

DO - 10.1017/bpp.2022.39

M3 - Journal article

VL - 7

SP - 721

EP - 743

JO - Behavioural Public Policy

JF - Behavioural Public Policy

SN - 2398-063X

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 329619544