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Automatically Green: Behavioral Economics and Environmental Protection

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TLDR
Green default rules may well be a more effective tool for altering outcomes than large economic incentives as discussed by the authors, and that may be more effective than, the standard tools of economic incentives, mandates, and bans.
Abstract
Careful attention to choice architecture promises to open up new possibilities for environmental protection – possibilities that go well beyond, and that may be more effective than, the standard tools of economic incentives, mandates, and bans. How, for example, do consumers choose between environmentally-friendly products or services and alternatives that are potentially damaging to the environment but less expensive? The answer may well depend on the default rule. Indeed, green default rules may well be a more effective tool for altering outcomes than large economic incentives. The underlying reasons include the power of suggestion; inertia and procrastination; and loss aversion. If well-chosen, green defaults are likely to have large effects in reducing the economic and environmental harms associated with various products and activities. Such defaults may or may not be more expensive to consumers. In deciding whether to establish green defaults, choice architects should consider both consumer welfare and a wide range of other costs and benefits. Sometimes that assessment will argue strongly in favor of green defaults, particularly when both economic and environmental considerations point in their direction. But when choice architects lack relevant information, when interest-group maneuvering is a potential problem, and when externalities are not likely to be significant, active choosing, perhaps accompanied by various influences (including provision of relevant information), will usually be preferable to a green default.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Should Governments Invest More in Nudging

TL;DR: It is concluded that nudging is a valuable approach that should be used more often in conjunction with traditional policies, but more calculations are needed to determine the relative effectiveness of nudging.
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Green nudges: Do they work? Are they ethical?

TL;DR: The authors provide a structured overview of the most important contributions to the literature on pro-environmental nudges and, second, offer some critical considerations that may help the practitioner come to an ethically informed assessment of nudges.
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The determinants of food choice

TL;DR: To develop the evidence base necessary for effective policies, the authors need to build bridges across different levels of knowledge and understanding, which requires experimental models that can fill in the gaps in understanding that are needed to inform policy, translational models that connect mechanistic understanding from laboratory studies to the real life human condition, and formal models that embed understanding in a way that enables policy-relevant predictions to be made.
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Beyond the roots of human inaction: Fostering collective effort toward ecosystem conservation

TL;DR: Psychologists already contribute to individual-level behavior-change campaigns in the service of sustainability, but attention is turning toward understanding and facilitating the role of individuals in collective and collaborative actions that will modify the environmentally damaging systems in which humans are embedded.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nudges that fail

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on default rules and argue that some default rules are ineffective, or at least less effective than choice architects hope and expect, and emphasize two reasons for this: strong antecedent preferences on the part of choosers and successful "counternudges" which persuade people to choose in a way that confound the efforts of choice architects.
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