Direct and Spillover Effects of a Social Information Campaign on Residential Water-Savings

Submitted by NENRE Concepcion on

This paper investigates direct and spillover effects of a social information campaign aimed at encouraging residential water savings in Colombia. The campaign was organized as a randomized field experiment, consisting of monthly delivery of consumption reports, including normative messages, for one year. Results indicate that social information and appeals to norm-based behavior reduce water use by up to 6.8% in households directly targeted by the campaign.

Experiments, Water

Essays on behavioral economics and policy design

Submitted by NENRE Concepcion on
EfD Authors:

This thesis consists of three self-contained chapters on issues related to spillover effects of behavioral and policy interventions aimed at reducing negative incentives provided by consumption and production subsidies, and discusses the implications for environmental policy design. The first two chapters investigate spillover effects of a behavioral intervention aimed at incentivizing residential water savings in Colombia.

Agriculture, Experiments, Conservation, Energy, Policy Design, Water

Compliance in Artisanal Fisheries: Do Morality, Legitimacy, and Peer Effects Matter?

Submitted by NENRE Concepcion on

We study the compliance behavior of artisanal fishermen in central-southern Chile. Our empirical analysis explores the role of individual morality, perception of legitimacy, and peer effects as determinant factors in the decision to violate regulations. We control for potential simultaneity bias in the peer effects variable.

Our results find evidence that moral standing, peer effects, and legitimacy considerations are important for fishermen’s compliance decisions. Policy implications to improve compliance with regulations in artisanal fisheries are discussed.

Fisheries