Reversing Reserves

ERN: Search Pub Date : 2020-04-01 DOI:10.3386/w26963
Parag A. Pathak, A. Rees-Jones, Tayfun Sönmez
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引用次数: 13

Abstract

Affirmative action policies are often implemented through reserve systems. In this study, we demonstrate that reserve systems face widespread misunderstanding by the public. This misunderstanding can lead individuals to support policies that ineffectively pursue their interests. To establish these claims, we present 1,013 participants in the Understanding America Study with choices between pairs of reserve systems. Participants are members of the group receiving affirmative action and are financially incentivized to choose the system that maximizes their chance of admission. Using this data, we apply a novel approach to identifying the rate of uptake of different decision rules used by participants. We find that participants rarely use a fully optimal decision rule. In contrast, we find that many choices—40% in our primary estimates—are rationalized by a nearly correct decision rule, with errors driven solely by failing to appreciate the importance of processing order. Failing to account for processing order causes individuals to fail to distinguish between two policies that achieve different degrees of affirmative action: policies that provide nonbinding minimum guarantees of the number of spaces allocated and policies that provide spaces over-and-above what would be allocated absent a reserve. Confusion about the importance of processing order helps to explain otherwise surprising decisions made in field applications of reserve systems. We discuss implications for managers and policy makers who are trying to implement reserve systems and who are accountable to the public. This paper was accepted by Axel Ockenfels, behavioral economics and decision analysis. Funding: The authors thank the National Science Foundation and the Wharton Behavioral Laboratory for financial support. Supplemental Material: The data files and online appendices are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4669 .
扭转储备
平权行动政策通常通过储备制度来实施。在这项研究中,我们证明了储备制度面临着公众普遍的误解。这种误解会导致个人支持那些不能有效地追求他们利益的政策。为了证明这些观点,我们在“了解美国研究”中让1013名参与者在储备系统对之间做出选择。参与者是接受平权行动的群体的成员,他们在经济上受到激励,选择最大限度提高他们被录取机会的制度。利用这些数据,我们采用一种新颖的方法来确定参与者使用的不同决策规则的吸收率。我们发现参与者很少使用完全最优决策规则。相比之下,我们发现许多选择——在我们的初步估计中有40%——是通过一个近乎正确的决策规则来合理化的,而错误仅仅是由于没有意识到处理顺序的重要性。不考虑处理顺序导致个人无法区分实现不同程度平权行动的两种政策:一种政策提供分配空间数量的非约束性最低保证,另一种政策提供的空间超出了在没有储备的情况下应该分配的空间。对处理顺序重要性的混淆有助于解释储备系统在现场应用中做出的出人意料的决定。我们讨论了对那些试图实施储备制度并对公众负责的管理者和政策制定者的影响。这篇论文被Axel Ockenfels,行为经济学和决策分析所接受。资助:作者感谢国家科学基金会和沃顿行为实验室的财政支持。补充材料:数据文件和在线附录可在https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4669上获得。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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