Conference presentations

Do Good Deeds Make Bad People?

Lisette Ibanez, Sophie Clot, and Gilles Grolleau

Abstract

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.

Keywords

Licensing effect; environmental policies; behavioural incentives;

Reference

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

See also

Published in

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