Working paper

When Nudges Backfire: Evidence from a Randomized Field Experiment to Boost Biological Pest Control

Sylvain Chabé-Ferret, Philippe Le Coent, Caroline Lefebvre, Raphaele Préget, François Salanié, Julie Subervie, and Sophie Thoyer

Abstract

Nudges are increasingly used to alter the behavior of economic agents as an alternative to monetary incentives. However, little is known as to whether nudges can backfire, that is, how and when they may generate effects opposite to those they intend to achieve. We provide the first field evidence of a nudge that is designed to encourage pro-environmental behavior, which instead backfires. We randomly allocate a social comparison nudge inviting winegrowers to adopt biological pest control as an alternative to chemical pesticide use. We find that our nudge decreases by half the adoption of biological pest control among the largest vineyards, where the bulk of adoption occurs. We show that this result can be rationalized in an economic model where winegrowers and winegrower-cooperative man-agers bargain over future rents generated by the adoption of biological pest control. This study highlights the importance of experimenting on a small scale with nudges aimed at encouraging adoption of virtuous behaviors in order to detect unexpected adverse effects, particularly in contexts where negotiations on the sharing of the costs of adoption are likely to occur.

Keywords

Nudges; Behavioral Economics; Pesticides; Government Policy;

JEL codes

  • D90: General
  • Q25: Water
  • Q58: Government Policy

Reference

Sylvain Chabé-Ferret, Philippe Le Coent, Caroline Lefebvre, Raphaele Préget, François Salanié, Julie Subervie, and Sophie Thoyer, When Nudges Backfire: Evidence from a Randomized Field Experiment to Boost Biological Pest Control, TSE Working Paper, n. 24-1512, February 2024.

See also

Published in

TSE Working Paper, n. 24-1512, February 2024