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Welfare justifications and responsibility in political decision making - The case of Nudging*

Kemper, Fynn and Wichardt, Philipp C. LU (2024) In Critical Policy Studies
Abstract

Nudging, i.e. the framing of decision environments to exploit known behavioral biases in order to induce certain outcomes, has received considerable attention as a potential policy tool in recent years. Motivated as preserving freedom of choice while making people better off according to their own judgment, nudging seemingly comes at fairly little responsibility for the nudger, i.e. policy makers, regarding eventual behavior. We argue that this is misleading, that nudging is normatively charged as other welfare-based policy interventions and, hence, does not free policy makes from normative choices. Sidestepping discussions about welfare measurement, we presume there is an entity which comprehensively captures individual well-being as... (More)

Nudging, i.e. the framing of decision environments to exploit known behavioral biases in order to induce certain outcomes, has received considerable attention as a potential policy tool in recent years. Motivated as preserving freedom of choice while making people better off according to their own judgment, nudging seemingly comes at fairly little responsibility for the nudger, i.e. policy makers, regarding eventual behavior. We argue that this is misleading, that nudging is normatively charged as other welfare-based policy interventions and, hence, does not free policy makes from normative choices. Sidestepping discussions about welfare measurement, we presume there is an entity which comprehensively captures individual well-being as intended, referred to as Welfare*, and highlight four aspects of it which we argue require normative/subjective decisions: (a) the inference from the empirical to what is desirable, (b) the choice of perspective necessary to empirically capture Welfare*, (c) the forecast about the evolution of future behavior, and (d) external factors affecting the agent devising the nudge. Thus, while nudging may well be good and helpful as a policy tool, we argue that there is little reason to think of it as being normatively more innocuous for policy makers than other welfare-based policy instruments.

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author
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
epub
subject
keywords
Nudging, political decision making, responsibility, welfare
in
Critical Policy Studies
publisher
Routledge
external identifiers
  • scopus:85188696448
ISSN
1946-0171
DOI
10.1080/19460171.2024.2324155
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
5de62d3d-0761-48dc-b016-626c4b7f40a3
date added to LUP
2024-04-15 13:47:01
date last changed
2024-04-15 13:47:54
@article{5de62d3d-0761-48dc-b016-626c4b7f40a3,
  abstract     = {{<p>Nudging, i.e. the framing of decision environments to exploit known behavioral biases in order to induce certain outcomes, has received considerable attention as a potential policy tool in recent years. Motivated as preserving freedom of choice while making people better off according to their own judgment, nudging seemingly comes at fairly little responsibility for the nudger, i.e. policy makers, regarding eventual behavior. We argue that this is misleading, that nudging is normatively charged as other welfare-based policy interventions and, hence, does not free policy makes from normative choices. Sidestepping discussions about welfare measurement, we presume there is an entity which comprehensively captures individual well-being as intended, referred to as Welfare*, and highlight four aspects of it which we argue require normative/subjective decisions: (a) the inference from the empirical to what is desirable, (b) the choice of perspective necessary to empirically capture Welfare*, (c) the forecast about the evolution of future behavior, and (d) external factors affecting the agent devising the nudge. Thus, while nudging may well be good and helpful as a policy tool, we argue that there is little reason to think of it as being normatively more innocuous for policy makers than other welfare-based policy instruments.</p>}},
  author       = {{Kemper, Fynn and Wichardt, Philipp C.}},
  issn         = {{1946-0171}},
  keywords     = {{Nudging; political decision making; responsibility; welfare}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Routledge}},
  series       = {{Critical Policy Studies}},
  title        = {{Welfare justifications and responsibility in political decision making - The case of Nudging*}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19460171.2024.2324155}},
  doi          = {{10.1080/19460171.2024.2324155}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}