Default Nudges: From People's Experiences to Policymaking Implications

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All over the world, private and public institutions have been attracted to “nudges,” understood as interventions that preserve freedom of choice, but that steer people in particular directions. The most effective nudges are often “defaults,” which establish what happens if people do nothing. For example, automatic enrollment in savings plans is a default nudge, as is automatic enrollment in green energy.

Default rules are in widespread use, but we have very little information about how people experience them, whether they see themselves as manipulated by them, and whether they approve of them in practice. In this book, Patrik Michaelsen and Cass R. Sunstein offer a wealth of new evidence about people’s experiences and perceptions with respect to default rules. They argue that this evidence can help us to answer important questions about the effectiveness and ethics of nudging.

The evidence offers a generally positive picture of how default nudges are perceived and experienced. The central conclusion is simple: empirical findings strongly support the conclusion that, taken as such, default nudges are both ethical and effective. These findings, and the accompanying discussion, have significant implications for policymakers in many nations, and also for the private sector.

Author(s): Patrik Michaelsen, Cass R. Sunstein
Publisher: Palgrave Pivot
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 91
City: Cham

Preface
Acknowledgments
Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
1 The Problem
Default Nudges
References
2 Challenges for Nudging and a Framework for Assessing Them
Effectiveness
Ethical Issues
What Is the Problem?
Unacceptable Paternalism
Manipulation
Responses to Criticisms
People’s Perceptions and Experiences of Nudges: A Framework
Proposition 1: People’s Perceptions and Experiences Are Part of the Net (Welfare) Effect of the Nudge
Proposition 2: People’s Perceptions and Experiences Are Relevant to the Ethical Assessment of Nudges
Proposition 3: People’s Perceptions and Experiences Can Moderate Behavior Change
The Relevance of Transparency
References
3 How Do People Evaluate Default Nudges?
Survey-Based Research
Transparency and Defaults
Transparency and Choice
Transparency and Perceptions of Default Nudges
Firsthand Evaluations
Choice Experiences: Do Defaults Affect Experienced Autonomy and Choice Satisfaction?
Perceptions of Defaults and Choice Architects Using Them
What We Know
References
4 Evaluation
Distribution
Measuring Welfare
Lessons
References
References
Index