你足够聪明知道该吃什么吗?对行为经济学作为监管理由的批判

Are you smart enough to know what to eat? A critique of behavioural economics as justification for regulation

European Review of Agricultural Economics · 2014
被引 34
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

批判行为经济学认为决策偏差可证明家长式政策合理的观点,指出认知失败本身不构成政府监管的充分理由,并讨论了自由选择的价值。

Abstract

With the rise of behavioural economics has come the belief that decision-making biases justify paternalistic policies. Such views challenge the notion of consumer sovereignty and the validity of traditional approaches of economic welfare analysis. While behavioural economics might improve the effectiveness of policies that are already justified on some other market-failure grounds, this article argues that the existence of cognitive failures, alone, do not justify government regulation. If one abandons the idea that consumers know what is in their best interest, judging the merits of policies becomes arbitrary and reflects only what a paternalist wants for others. The typical behavioural economic experiment occurs with college students devoid of real-world context. The biases found in such setting may not extrapolate well to conditions where people have more experience and knowledge, and where they can learn from past mistakes. Even when behavioural biases persist in the ‘real world’, consumers face incentives to engage in activities that protect them from the adverse consequences of the biases, and public policies that shield people from such consequences reduce incentives to self-regulate. The article concludes with some ideas for future research and a discussion of the merits of freedom of choice.

行为经济学消费者主权家长式监管认知偏差