Defaults, Mandates, and Taxes: Policy Design with Active and Passive Decision-Makers
Jacob Goldin and
Nicholas Lawson
American Law and Economics Review, 2016, vol. 18, issue 2, 438-462
Abstract:
Growing evidence suggests that many people are surprisingly responsive to unconventional policy tools, such as defaults or choice-framing, yet unresponsive to conventional ones, such as taxes or subsidies. This article studies the optimal choice of policy instrument in settings characterized by such features. We utilize a simple binary-choice model in which decision-makers are either active or passive; active choosers make their decisions by comparing perceived costs and benefits whereas passive choosers select whichever option is the default. From this simple model, a number of results emerge. First, manipulating the default option is preferable to imposing a mandate when active choosers tend to make correct decisions. Second, taxes and defaults are complements, not substitutes; employing the two types of instruments in conjunction can yield better results than utilizing either one alone. Finally, the optimal combination of taxes and defaults is typically preferable to a mandate even in settings where active choosers are prone to biases. The results establish important limits on the range of settings in which mandates are an efficient policy response to decision-maker errors.
JEL-codes: H20 H21 H80 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2016
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (9)
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