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Behavioral Economics and Public Policy

David Just and Andrew Hanks have a new paper forthcoming in the American Journal of Agricultural Economics entitled: The Hidden Cost of Regulation (I noticed Marc Bellemare beat me to the punch in discussing his views on the paper).  

This is an important paper in many respects.  As I see it, one of the general problems with the behavioral economics literature is that the findings of behavioral biases (e.g., status quo bias, overweighting low probability risks, loss aversion, present, etc.) are almost always put forth as motivation for more government regulation.  Yet, it is easy to imagine many behavioral economic findings suggesting just the opposite - though that is rarely the conclusion drawn by the authors.

Here's an  example I used in the Food Police

Here is the irony. The behavioral economists have told us for years that humans make mistakes by exaggerating the importance of low-probability risks. Yet, I have not seen a single behavioral economist use this insight to tell the food police to relax and put their fears over growth hormones, genetically modified food, or pesticides into perspective. Instead, we see the behavioral economists partner with the food police to advocate policies they want even if it means ignoring the implications of their own research.

Now, enter the paper by Just and Hanks.  They show that if consumers have a positive emotional attachment to a good that a government policy that attempts to restrict consumption of that good may cause a backlash by causing people to want it even more.

 Think of the Bloomberg large soda ban.  The very action of telling people "you can't have large sodas" makes them want large sodas even more, which makes banning large sodas even more costly in terms of foregone consumer welfare.  They argue that the reverse  may also be true: subsidizing something like healthy food that people feel like they should be consuming more of makes  them want it all the more.  

The general story here is that people's preferences (what they want) may not be independent of the policies government officials pursue.  It is an issue I've studied on a couple of occasions (here and here) with regard to the effects of mandatory labels on genetically engineered food. If people see a mandatory label as information about the risks of genetic engineering, the very presence of a label could make them even more averse to genetically engineered food.  

All this makes the normal sort of "welfare economics" we economists normally do a bit tricky.    Normally we look at the choices (and prices) before a policy is in place and the choices (and prices) after a policy is in place to determine whether consumers are better off with the policy or not.  How do we determine better off?  With a mathematical function derived from the choices people make.  Think of it like: happiness = f(prices, # of options).   But, if a policy changes preferences, then it is hard to know whether the consumer is happier or sadder because, in a sense, they're now a different person that has different tastes and wants.  Not only have prices and number of options changed but the function relating happiness to these factors has changed too.

While the Just and Hanks paper is largely a theoretical paper, I'm please to see a framework put forward for people to seriously evaluate public policies in a fully consistent behavioral economics framework rather than the ad hoc way it's normally done.  I also hinted as this sort of thing in a paper with Bailey Norwood and Stephan Marette where we ran some experiments where people could either choose for themselves or where other's made choices for them (we called the choosers the "paternalist" and the recipients of the choices (or children as Stephan calls them) the "paternalee)".  

One interpretation of these results is that paternalees place an intrinsic value on freedom of choice. This does not necessarily imply that the paternalees’ choices are in any sense “optimal” or that, should paternalees suffer from time-inconsistent preferences, their long-term well-being couldn’t be enhanced by restricting current choices. Nevertheless, if this interpretation is correct, the results suggest that any long-term benefits that might arise from paternalism must be weighed against the loss of freedom of choice.

Applying behavioral economics to politics

This is an interesting review paper on Behavioral Political Economy by Jan Schnellenbach and Christian Schubert.

One of the points they make is that researchers have not fully integrated the insights of behavioral economics into analyses of how politicians and bureaucrats behave.
 

 

A quote

The case of Libertarian Paternalism therefore illustrates the difference between BPE [behavioral political economy] and behavioral welfare economics, which is very akin to the old conflict between Political Economy and traditional welfare economics. Behavioral welfare economists are currently at risk of repeating the mistake of neglecting the real-world political process with its many intricacies. Under these conditions, policy advice addressed to an imaginary social planner may not only be useless, but even dangerous, if it helps to promote policies that have unintended, negative consequences under real-world conditions.

Regulating your food choices vs. retailers' food choices

Suppose the government made it illegal for you to buy sugared soda.  What would be your reaction?  How would you feel?  

Now, suppose instead that the government made it illegal for grocery stores and other vendors to sell sugared soda.  Is your reaction to the second law less visceral than the first?  

I suspect so.  But, here's the key: both laws impose the same restriction on your freedom - the outcomes are precisely the same.

Writing at Forbes, John Goodman notes this dichotomy in the case of California eggs (HT David Henderson)

California has a new law that requires all eggs sold in the state to come from chickens that are housed in roomier cages. Specifically, the hens “must be able to lie down, stand up and fully spread their wings.”

So how many Californians have been arrested for eating the wrong kind of egg? Zero. Not even one? Not one. Actually, the law doesn’t take effect until January, but even then egg eaters will have nothing to fear. The reason: the law doesn’t apply to people who eat eggs. It only applies to people who sell eggs.

When you stop to think about it, that’s not unusual. Almost all government restrictions on our freedom are indirect. They are imposed on us by way of some business. In fact, laws that directly restrict the freedom of the individual are rare and almost always controversial.

After discussing various reasons for the differences in the way we respond to individual vs. business restrictions, Goodman concludes:

Finally, the idea being proposed here seems consistent with history. Over the past two hundred years, we have had a steady migration of people from agriculture to the cities, where they became employees of firms. Over the same period of time we have had a parallel increase in the intrusiveness of government.

Bottom line: if there were no firms, taxes would be much lower, there would be far fewer regulations and government would be a much less important institution in our lives.

What are the farm-level effects of GMOs?

A new study published in PLoS ONE by Wilhelm Klümper and Matin Qaim surveyed the literature on the farm-level effects of GMO adoption.  They conducted a Meta analysis - a type of quantitative literature review - covering 147 previous studies.

What did they find?

On average, GM technology adoption has reduced chemical pesticide use by 37%, increased crop yields by 22%, and increased farmer profits by 68%. Yield gains and pesticide reductions are larger for insect-resistant crops than for herbicide-tolerant crops. Yield and profit gains are higher in developing countries than in developed countries.

This is a a decent study which summarizes what most people who follow the literature already know.  There will, no doubt, be attempts by the anti-GMO crowd to discredit the study.  However, Qaim is a productive, well known agricultural economist.  He’s published in the best outlets in agricultural and development economics, and even in journals like Science and Nature Biotechnology.  

Like any Meta analysis, the study isn't perfect, and is only as good as the studies being reviewed.  A few criticisms.  The analysis didn't much differentiate between insecticides (the use of which has almost certainly fallen) and herbicides (total use is probably up, but because GM producers have switched to less toxic herbicides  the total toxicity is likely down).  Also, some of the underlying studies may not have done a good job separating yield gains from traditional hybrid breeding from gains conveyed by biotechnology per se, so the yield gains attributable to GM may be a bit overstated (e.g., see this study).  What I’m saying here is that corn/soybean yields probably would have increased regardless of whether GM was adopted, so you have to “back out” the increase attributable to GM; some studies do that well, others don’t.  Finally, as you can see in their figures, there is a lot of heterogeneity across studies; the mean effects for yields and profit are positive, but some studies show negative.  

In any event, this is a good study that re-confirms my own reading of the literature.

Paternalism - Immigration Edition

A lot of policies involve group A trying to pass laws that they perceive to improve group B's well-being.  But, how often do we ask group B what they really want?

This new paper by Grace Melo, Gregory Colson and Octavio Ramirez shows how such paternalism can might lead to policies that group B doesn't actually prefer.

This study presents evidence from a survey and choice experiment on the preferences of Hispanic immigrants who entered the United States illegally for different immigration reform proposal attributes. Key components of the current competing US Senate and House immigration reform bills are considered including pathways to legal permanent residence, temporary work visas, family visitation rights, and access to medical care. The results quantify the value Hispanic immigrants place on different policy attributes and suggest that longer-term work visas are highly valued. Ability to legally work in the United States and a pathway to citizenship are substantially more valued than social services such as medical care and social security benefits.