Back to Search Start Over

Defaults and Attention: The Drop Out Effect

Authors :
Andrew Caplin
Daniel J. Martin
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

When choice options are complex, policy makers may seek to reduce decision making errors by making a high quality option the default. We show that this positive effect is at risk because such a policy creates incentives for decision makers to "drop out" by paying no attention to the decision and accepting the default sight unseen. Using decision time as a proxy for attention, we confirm the importance of this effect in an experimental setting. A key challenge for policy makers is to measure, and if possible mitigate, such drop out behavior in the field.

Subjects

Subjects :
jel:D82
jel:D01
jel:D04
jel:D03

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od.......645..e4d26972d791b3da69c1737508385ea3