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Vaccination as personal public-good provision.

Authors :
Reddinger, J. Lucas
Charness, Gary
Levine, David
Source :
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization. Aug2024, Vol. 224, p481-499. 19p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Vaccination against infectious diseases has both private and public benefits. We study whether social preferences – concerns for the well-being of other people – are associated with one's decision regarding vaccination. We measure these social preferences for 549 online subjects with a public-good game and an altruism game. To the extent that one gets vaccinated out of concern for the health of others, contribution in the public-good game is analogous to an individual's decision to obtain vaccination, while our altruism game provides a different measure of altruism, equity, and efficiency concerns. We proxy vaccine demand with how quickly a representative individual voluntarily took the initial vaccination for COVID-19 (after the vaccine was widely available). We collect COVID-19 vaccination history separately from the games to avoid experimenter-demand effects. We find a strong result: Contribution in the public-good game is associated with greater demand to voluntarily receive a first dose, and thus also to vaccinate earlier. Compared to a subject who contributes nothing, one who contributes the maximum ($4) is 58% more likely to obtain a first dose voluntarily in the four-month period that we study (April through August 2021). In short, people who are more pro-social are more likely to take a voluntary COVID-19 vaccination. Behavior in our altruism game does not predict vaccination. We recommend further research on the use of pro-social preferences to help motivate individuals to vaccinate for other transmissible diseases, such as the flu and HPV. • Individual contribution in a public-good game predicts vaccination in the field. • Results hint that a preference for equity is an underlying mechanism for vaccination. • We add to a body of evidence that economics lab measurements predict field behavior. • We offer insight into how behavioral health policy may yet harness social preferences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01672681
Volume :
224
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178638854
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2024.06.015