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Economics after behavioral attack. Behavioral issues in energy and the environment Economics 331b Spring 2011. Agenda as of 2/16. Today: Behavioral economics Friday: Lint will lead review session Monday: Climate science Wednesday: Climate science and IAM
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Behavioral issues in energy and the environment Economics 331b Spring 2011
Agenda as of 2/16 Today: Behavioral economics Friday: Lint will lead review session Monday: Climate science Wednesday: Climate science and IAM Thursday: review material in sections Friday: midterm in class
Background Major grounds for government intervention in energy and environmental markets: • Market failures (uninternalized externalities such as CO2 emissions, oil premium, …) • Behavioral failures (informational, decisional, etc.)
A central behavioral puzzle:First-cost v. deferred cost The energy efficiency puzzle: Consider the life-cycle cost (LCC) of an automobile: LCC = Purchase price + ∑(1+r)-tFutureCostt = First cost + Deferred cost Finding: Deferred cost is generally discounted by 50% or more. What is going on here?
The challenge to mainstream economics Here are some issues of decision theory from standard economics that are challenged (from least to most damaging): • People have good information and/or process information efficiently (data competence) • People act to optimize their preferences relative to information and resources (decision competence) • Institutions are appropriately designed so that people acting rationally will make good decisions (good institutions). • People have self-interested and stable preferences over consumption of goods, services, and capital (non-weird preferences) Behavioral economics challenges all of these.
1. Informational incompetence Classical view: People have good information and/or process information efficiently Behavioral view: People have all kinds of biases in structuring information (law of small numbers, overconfidence, anchoring, hindness bias) Examples of overconfidence effect: • Second-year MBA students overestimated the number of job offers they would receive and their starting salary. • Students overestimated the scores they would achieve on exams. • Almost all newlyweds in a US study expected their marriage to last a lifetime, even while aware of the divorce statistics. • Most smokers believe they are less at risk of developing smoking-related diseases than others who smoke.
2. Decision incompetence Classical view: People act to optimize their preferences relative to information and resources Behavioral view: People make all kinds of trivial and tragic mistakes in daily life Examples: • Bet on red because red “is due to come up soon.” • 4 million unwanted pregnancies a year • 37,000 traffic fatalities in 2008 • Addictions (smoking, alcohol, …) • Default option matters in pension decisions, organ transplants • Refusal to lower the asking price on house because it is below the price you paid for your house? • MPG illusion
Defaults matter for organ transplants Eric J. Johnson and Daniel Goldstein, “Do Defaults Save Lives?” Science, Nov 2003.
3. Bad incentives and institutions Classical: Institutions are structured so that rational actors will produce efficient decisions Behavioral: All kinds of principal-agent problems get in the way Examples: • Energy pricing: Yale pays the electricity bill, so the price of higher energy use to students and faculty is…. ZERO. • Tax distortions • Political: what are the incentives for political leaders to set MSB=MSC?
Effect of energy incentives on energy in rent v. own International Energy Agency, Ming the Gap, 2007
4. Weird* preferences Classical: People have self-interested preferences over consumption of goods, services, and capital (standard preferences) Behavioral: People are altruistic, care about fairness, will contribute to the public good, have spite. Examples: • Prisoners’ dilemma: In fact, people are much more likely to cooperate than the PD game would predict. (Good news for public goods) • Spite: But some people will fight to the death and bring everyone else down with them (Hitler) In sense of not conforming to classical economics. Not purely concerned with optimizing a stable, time-consistent, purely self-interested, complete set of preferences over all market and non-market goods and services for all periods in the future. Also, altruistic, kinky, funky, wild, erratic, spaced-out, random, slapdash.
Weird preferences (cont.) Classical: People have well-defined and stable preferences over goods and time (stable preferences) Behavioral: People have status-quo bias, reference levels, adaption, loss aversion, hyperbolic discounting, uncontrollable passion or rage Examples: • Hyperbolic preferences: overdiscount future pains and benefits • Difference between willingness to pay and willingness to accept in contingent valuation studies (for say species extinction) • More important is adaptation to current situation: happiness paradox, lottery winners, quadriplegics, “rat race” or “treadmill” syndrome
What are policy responses For first three, not deep philosophical issues and requires education, better information, nudges: • Data incompetence: provide better data or simplify calculations (labeling, $ labeling on energy using appliances) • Decision incompetence: “Nudge” to more sensible decisions with different default options (“soft parentalism”). • Bad institutions need fixing (meter Yale rooms?) For last one, deep philosophical and political issue about whether should respect individual preferences: • Preferences: • “Weird” preferences: Shouldn’t we respect them? • Incoherent preferences: Should governments override them? Treat people like children?
What should we think about? • The gasoline paradox: People pay $0.37 for $1 of PV of gasoline savings? • The organ transplant opt-in/opt-out paradox.
First-cost v. future cost The energy efficiency puzzle: Consider the life-cycle cost (LCC) of an automobile: LCC = purchase price + present value running costs = purchase price + ∑(1+r)-tFutureCostt Basic result is that the breakeven discount rate is 20+% p.y [E.g., Allcott and Wozny ≈ 60 % per year] What is going on here? • Incomplete information about MPG or fuel prices? • Risk or loss aversion? • High discount rates and hyperbolic discounting? • Principal-agent conflicts? • Computational incompetence (bounded rationality)? • Limited managerial time?
Defaults matter for organ transplants Eric J. Johnson and Daniel Goldstein, “Do Defaults Save Lives?” Science, Nov 2003.
The Zillion Dollar Question Are all these minor “anomalies” … or are they central to economic behavior?