Incentives to Eat Healthy: Evidence from a Grocery Store Field Experiment

J. List, A. Samek, Terri Zhu
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

We use a field experiment to investigate the effect of incentives on food purchase decisions at a grocery store. We recruit over 200 participants and track their purchases for a period of 6 months, permitting us a glimpse of more than 3,500 individual shopping trips. We randomize participants to one of several treatments, in which we incentivize fresh fruit and vegetable purchases, provide tips for fruit and vegetable preparation, or both. We report several key insights. First, our informational content treatment has little effect. Second, we find an important price effect: modest pecuniary incentives more than double the proportion of dollars spent on produce in the grocery store. Third, we find an interesting pattern of consumption after the experiment ends: even when incentives are removed, the treatment group has higher fruit and vegetable purchases compared to the control group. These long-term results are in stark contrast to either a standard price model or a behavioral model of 'crowd out.' Rather, our results are consonant with a habit formation model. This opens up the distinct possibility that short term incentives can be used as a key instrument to combat obesity.
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健康饮食的动机:来自杂货店现场实验的证据
我们使用实地实验来调查激励对杂货店食品购买决策的影响。我们招募了200多名参与者,在6个月的时间里跟踪他们的购买情况,让我们得以一窥超过3500次的个人购物之旅。我们将参与者随机分配到几种治疗方法中,其中我们鼓励购买新鲜水果和蔬菜,提供水果和蔬菜准备技巧,或两者兼而有之。我们报告了几个关键的见解。首先,我们的信息内容处理效果甚微。其次,我们发现了一个重要的价格效应:适度的金钱激励使人们在杂货店购买农产品的支出比例增加了一倍以上。第三,在实验结束后,我们发现了一个有趣的消费模式:即使取消了奖励,实验组的水果和蔬菜购买量也高于对照组。这些长期结果与标准价格模型或“挤出”行为模型形成了鲜明对比。相反,我们的结果与习惯形成模型是一致的。这开辟了一种明显的可能性,即短期激励可以作为对抗肥胖的关键工具。
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