List John A, Samek Anya Savikhin
University of Chicago and NBER, United States.
University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States.
J Health Econ. 2015 Jan;39:135-46. doi: 10.1016/j.jhealeco.2014.11.002. Epub 2014 Nov 21.
We leverage behavioral economics to explore new approaches to tackling child food choice and consumption. Using a field experiment with >1500 children, we report several key insights. We find that incentives have large influences: in the control, 17% of children prefer the healthy snack, whereas introduction of small incentives increases take-up of the healthy snack to ∼75%. There is some evidence that the effects continue post-treatment, consistent with a model of habit formation. We find little evidence that the framing of incentives (loss vs. gain) matters. Educational messaging alone has little effect, but we observe a combined effect of messaging and incentives: together they provide an important influence on food choice.
我们利用行为经济学来探索应对儿童食物选择和消费问题的新方法。通过对1500多名儿童进行实地实验,我们报告了几个关键发现。我们发现激励措施有很大影响:在对照组中,17%的儿童更喜欢健康零食,而引入小额激励措施后,选择健康零食的比例增加到了约75%。有证据表明,这种影响在治疗后仍会持续,这与习惯形成模型一致。我们几乎没有发现激励措施的框架(损失与收益)有影响的证据。仅教育信息几乎没有效果,但我们观察到信息传递和激励措施的综合效果:它们共同对食物选择产生重要影响。