The Use of Financial Incentives to Prevent Undesirable Behaviors

Behaviors that are putting people's health and well-being at risk are widespread in the developing world and some of them, like smoking and unhealthy diets, are on the rise. Some of these behaviors can be prohibited or prevented by taxation. But financial incentives such as conditional cash transfers are also increasingly proposed and tested to discourage such behaviors, in domains as varied as HIV/AIDS, drugs, alcohol, smoking, obesity, or early marriage prevention. This paper presents the theoretical justification for using such incentives, distinguishing between the price, income effects, and the nudge effects. The growing literature about the effectiveness of financial incentives to prevent undesirable behaviors is reviewed in detail for each type of harmful behavior. Finally, the paper discusses the long-term sustainability of such incentives, a key issue if they are to be scaled up beyond pilot programs and research projects. The current evidence on whether such incentives have an impact after they are discontinued is mixed. Some design features, like lotteries or commitment devices, could induce savings as well as increase effectiveness, therefore improving sustainability.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: de Walque, Damien
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018-05
Subjects:INCENTIVES, BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION, HIV AIDS, SMOKING, ILLICIT DRUGS, ALCOHOL, OBESITY, EARLY MARRIAGE, CHILD MARRIAGE,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/613881525264515343/The-use-of-financial-incentives-to-prevent-undesirable-behaviors
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29769
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spelling dig-okr-10986297692024-06-23T07:36:49Z The Use of Financial Incentives to Prevent Undesirable Behaviors de Walque, Damien INCENTIVES BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION HIV AIDS SMOKING ILLICIT DRUGS ALCOHOL OBESITY EARLY MARRIAGE CHILD MARRIAGE Behaviors that are putting people's health and well-being at risk are widespread in the developing world and some of them, like smoking and unhealthy diets, are on the rise. Some of these behaviors can be prohibited or prevented by taxation. But financial incentives such as conditional cash transfers are also increasingly proposed and tested to discourage such behaviors, in domains as varied as HIV/AIDS, drugs, alcohol, smoking, obesity, or early marriage prevention. This paper presents the theoretical justification for using such incentives, distinguishing between the price, income effects, and the nudge effects. The growing literature about the effectiveness of financial incentives to prevent undesirable behaviors is reviewed in detail for each type of harmful behavior. Finally, the paper discusses the long-term sustainability of such incentives, a key issue if they are to be scaled up beyond pilot programs and research projects. The current evidence on whether such incentives have an impact after they are discontinued is mixed. Some design features, like lotteries or commitment devices, could induce savings as well as increase effectiveness, therefore improving sustainability. 2018-05-02T18:56:14Z 2018-05-02T18:56:14Z 2018-05 Working Paper Document de travail Documento de trabajo http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/613881525264515343/The-use-of-financial-incentives-to-prevent-undesirable-behaviors https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29769 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8424 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic INCENTIVES
BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION
HIV AIDS
SMOKING
ILLICIT DRUGS
ALCOHOL
OBESITY
EARLY MARRIAGE
CHILD MARRIAGE
INCENTIVES
BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION
HIV AIDS
SMOKING
ILLICIT DRUGS
ALCOHOL
OBESITY
EARLY MARRIAGE
CHILD MARRIAGE
spellingShingle INCENTIVES
BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION
HIV AIDS
SMOKING
ILLICIT DRUGS
ALCOHOL
OBESITY
EARLY MARRIAGE
CHILD MARRIAGE
INCENTIVES
BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION
HIV AIDS
SMOKING
ILLICIT DRUGS
ALCOHOL
OBESITY
EARLY MARRIAGE
CHILD MARRIAGE
de Walque, Damien
The Use of Financial Incentives to Prevent Undesirable Behaviors
description Behaviors that are putting people's health and well-being at risk are widespread in the developing world and some of them, like smoking and unhealthy diets, are on the rise. Some of these behaviors can be prohibited or prevented by taxation. But financial incentives such as conditional cash transfers are also increasingly proposed and tested to discourage such behaviors, in domains as varied as HIV/AIDS, drugs, alcohol, smoking, obesity, or early marriage prevention. This paper presents the theoretical justification for using such incentives, distinguishing between the price, income effects, and the nudge effects. The growing literature about the effectiveness of financial incentives to prevent undesirable behaviors is reviewed in detail for each type of harmful behavior. Finally, the paper discusses the long-term sustainability of such incentives, a key issue if they are to be scaled up beyond pilot programs and research projects. The current evidence on whether such incentives have an impact after they are discontinued is mixed. Some design features, like lotteries or commitment devices, could induce savings as well as increase effectiveness, therefore improving sustainability.
format Working Paper
topic_facet INCENTIVES
BEHAVIOR MODIFICATION
HIV AIDS
SMOKING
ILLICIT DRUGS
ALCOHOL
OBESITY
EARLY MARRIAGE
CHILD MARRIAGE
author de Walque, Damien
author_facet de Walque, Damien
author_sort de Walque, Damien
title The Use of Financial Incentives to Prevent Undesirable Behaviors
title_short The Use of Financial Incentives to Prevent Undesirable Behaviors
title_full The Use of Financial Incentives to Prevent Undesirable Behaviors
title_fullStr The Use of Financial Incentives to Prevent Undesirable Behaviors
title_full_unstemmed The Use of Financial Incentives to Prevent Undesirable Behaviors
title_sort use of financial incentives to prevent undesirable behaviors
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018-05
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/613881525264515343/The-use-of-financial-incentives-to-prevent-undesirable-behaviors
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/29769
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