Who Opts In?
CESifo, Munich, 2018
CESifo Working Paper No. 7091
Payments and discounts incentivize participation in many transactions about which people know little, but can learn more - payments for medical trial participation, signing bonuses for job applicants, or price rebates on consumer durables. Who opts into the transaction when given such incentives? We show theoretically and experimentally that increasing participation payments disproportionately attracts individuals for whom learning about the transaction is harder. These participants decide based on worse information and are more likely to regret their decision ex post. The learning-based selection effect is stronger when information acquisition is more costly. Moreover, it outweighs selection on risk preferences in many of our treatments.
Empirical and Theoretical Methods
Behavioural Economics