Working Paper

The (In)Elasticity of Moral Ignorance

Marta Serra-Garcia, Nora Szech
CESifo, Munich, 2019

CESifo Working Paper No. 7555

Ignorance enables individuals to act immorally. This is well known in policy circles, where there is keen interest in lowering moral ignorance. In this paper, we study how the demand for moral ignorance responds to monetary incentives and how the demand curve for ignorance reacts to social norm messages. We propose a simple behavioral model in which individuals suffer moral costs when behaving selfishly in the face of moral information. In several experiments, we find that moral ignorance decreases by more than 30 percentage points with small monetary incentives, but we find no significant change with social norm messages and we document strong persistence of ignorance across moral contexts. Our findings indicate that rather simple messaging interventions may have limited effects on ignorance. In contrast, changes in incentives could be highly effective.

CESifo Category
Empirical and Theoretical Methods
Behavioural Economics
Keywords: information avoidance, morality, unethical behavior, social norms, moral reminders, social nudges
JEL Classification: D830, D910, C910