Back to Mill? Behavioral Welfare Economics

C. Sunstein
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

A growing body of normative work explores how deference to people’s choices might be reconciled with behavioral findings about human error. This work has strong implications for economic analysis of law, cost-benefit analysis, and regulatory policy. in light of behavioral findings, regulators should adopt a working presumption in favor of respect for people’s self-regarding choices, but only if those choices are adequately informed and sufficiently free from behavioral biases. The working presumption should itself be rebuttable on welfare grounds, with an understanding that the ends that people choose might make their lives go less well. For example, people might die prematurely or suffer from serious illness, and what they receive in return might not (on any plausible account of welfare) be nearly enough. The underlying reason might involve a lack of information or a behavioral bias, identifiable or not, in which case intervention can fit with the working presumption; but the real problem might involve philosophical questions about the proper understanding of welfare, and about what it means for people to have a good life.
回到密尔?行为福利经济学
越来越多的规范性工作探讨了对人们选择的尊重如何与关于人为错误的行为发现相协调。这项工作对法律的经济分析、成本效益分析和监管政策具有重要意义。根据行为学上的发现,监管者应该采取一种有效的假设,即尊重人们的自我选择,但前提是这些选择是充分知情的,并且充分不受行为偏见的影响。从福利的角度来看,这种有效的假设本身应该是可以反驳的,要明白人们选择的目标可能会让他们的生活变得不那么美好。例如,人们可能会过早死亡或患上严重疾病,而他们得到的回报可能远远不够(基于任何合理的福利解释)。潜在的原因可能涉及缺乏信息或行为偏见,可识别或不可识别,在这种情况下,干预可以符合工作假设;但真正的问题可能涉及对福利的正确理解,以及对人们拥有美好生活意味着什么等哲学问题。
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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