Communication à une conférence à comité de sélection

Do Good Deeds Make Bad People?

Lisette Ibanez, Sophie Clot et Gilles Grolleau

Résumé

A limited but growing literature contends that licensing can operate by committing to a virtuous act in a preceding choice, which reduces negative self-attributions associated with donating less or behaving less virtuously in the succeeding decision. Psychological research and behavioral economics strongly suggest that pre-existing intrinsic motivations of individuals play a major role in determining their subsequent choices when faced with a voluntary or mandatory virtuous ‘act’. In this paper, we report the results of a pilot experimental study examining licensing effect in the environmental realm, using a 2 (mandatory or voluntary nature of the virtuous act) X 2 (intrinsically or non-intrinsically motivated individuals) between subjects design. We found that intrinsically motivated and non-intrinsically motivated subjects reacted adversely to the two policy scenarios. The licensing effect occurs when combining intrinsically (resp., non-intrinsically) motivated individuals and mandatory (resp. voluntary) conditions.

Mots-clés

Licensing effect; environmental policies; behavioural incentives;

Référence

Lisette Ibanez, Sophie Clot et Gilles Grolleau, « Do Good Deeds Make Bad People? », Quality Labels in Agrofood Industry, Toulouse, France, 15–16 décembre 2011.

Voir aussi

Publié dans

Quality Labels in Agrofood Industry, Toulouse, France, 15–16 décembre 2011