监管的隐性成本:对命令与控制的情感反应

The Hidden Cost of Regulation: Emotional Responses to Command and Control

American Journal of Agricultural Economics · 2015
被引 22
人大 AABS 3

中文导读

研究发现消费者对政策的情感反应(如对命令式政策的抵触或对补贴的认可)会改变其边际效用,造成标准福利分析无法检测的隐性成本,并提出了一个模型来估算这些成本的下限。

Abstract

In economic models of behavior, consumers are assumed to value the goods and services they purchase based on stable preferences over externally identifiable attributes such as quality. These models predict that consumers will respond to changes in price in a way that is independent of the source of the price change. Yet research in the behavioral sciences indicates that consumers that are emotionally attached to a consumption good or other behavior might respond with resistance when policies threaten their consumption or behavior. Moreover, policies that in fact validate some emotional attachments can stir a stronger preference for the good or behavior. Reviewing both survey and experimental data from the literature, we demonstrate how such emotional responses can create hidden costs to policy implementation that could not be detected using standard welfare economic techniques. Building upon Rabin's work on fairness in games, we propose a partial equilibrium model of emotional response to policy whereby preferences are endogenous to policy choices. In accordance with evidence both from our own analysis and the field, we propose that confrontational policies (such as a sin tax) increase the marginal utility for a good, and that validating policies (such as a subsidy) also increases the marginal utility for a good. A social planner that ignores potential emotional responses to policy changes may unwittingly induce significant dead weight loss. Using our model, we propose a feasible method to determine if emotional deadweight costs exist, and to place a lower bound on the size of these costs.

情绪反应规制成本偏好内生性对抗性政策