Department of Economics, MIT, Cambridge, MA 02142.
Am Econ Rev. 2019 Apr;109(4):1290-322.
This paper studies alcohol consumption among low-income workers in India. In a 3-week field experiment, the majority of 229 cycle-rickshaw drivers were willing to forgo substantial monetary payments in order to set incentives for themselves to remain sober, thus exhibiting demand for commitment to sobriety. Randomly receiving sobriety incentives significantly reduced daytime drinking while leaving overall drinking unchanged. I find no evidence of higher daytime sobriety significantly changing labor supply, productivity, or earnings. In contrast, increasing sobriety raised savings by 50 percent, an effect that does not appear to be solely explained by changes in income net of alcohol expenditures.
本文研究了印度低收入工人的饮酒情况。在一项为期 3 周的实地实验中,229 名人力车夫中的大多数人愿意放弃大量金钱报酬,为自己设定保持清醒的激励,从而表现出对戒酒的需求。随机接受戒酒激励措施显著减少了白天的饮酒量,而整体饮酒量不变。我没有发现更高的白天清醒度显著改变劳动力供应、生产力或收入的证据。相比之下,提高清醒度将储蓄增加了 50%,这一效应似乎不仅仅是酒精支出净收入变化的结果。