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Water Tariffs and Consumers’ Inaction

Water Tariffs and Consumers’ Inaction
Water Tariffs and Consumers’ Inaction
We study adoption by more than 150,000 households of an optional transitional water tariff implemented in the South-East of England in conjunction with an universal metering programme. We document how inertia leads customers to relinquish substantial financial gains, with less than a third of customers who would benefit from adopting the transitional tariff actually doing so. We also show how households responds not only to overall gains, but also to more short-term gains from adopting the tariff. Households in high income/high education neighbourhoods display a higher responsiveness to potential savings, as do households where the contract holder is of prime age instead of being more senior or junior. Finally, the probability of adoption is positively impacted by adoption by neighbours, thus suggesting the presence of peer effects. We also look at the timing of the call, showing how most customers choose to call early on, when less information is available, but the issue is more prominent. The choice of when to call is consistent with customers taking into account the option value of waiting, as well as future consumption patterns.
1802
University of Southampton
Ornaghi, Carmine
33275e47-4642-4023-a195-39c91d0146b0
Tonin, Mirco
bd4b5fbe-5992-44cb-a702-9c768fdf9bc0
Ornaghi, Carmine
33275e47-4642-4023-a195-39c91d0146b0
Tonin, Mirco
bd4b5fbe-5992-44cb-a702-9c768fdf9bc0

Ornaghi, Carmine and Tonin, Mirco (2018) Water Tariffs and Consumers’ Inaction (Discussion Papers in Economics and Econometrics, 1802) University of Southampton 23pp.

Record type: Monograph (Discussion Paper)

Abstract

We study adoption by more than 150,000 households of an optional transitional water tariff implemented in the South-East of England in conjunction with an universal metering programme. We document how inertia leads customers to relinquish substantial financial gains, with less than a third of customers who would benefit from adopting the transitional tariff actually doing so. We also show how households responds not only to overall gains, but also to more short-term gains from adopting the tariff. Households in high income/high education neighbourhoods display a higher responsiveness to potential savings, as do households where the contract holder is of prime age instead of being more senior or junior. Finally, the probability of adoption is positively impacted by adoption by neighbours, thus suggesting the presence of peer effects. We also look at the timing of the call, showing how most customers choose to call early on, when less information is available, but the issue is more prominent. The choice of when to call is consistent with customers taking into account the option value of waiting, as well as future consumption patterns.

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More information

Published date: 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 419221
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/419221
PURE UUID: ee7c9fc6-96fb-4907-b4a6-e85ce2da7386
ORCID for Carmine Ornaghi: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2704-2537

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Date deposited: 09 Apr 2018 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:42

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Contributors

Author: Carmine Ornaghi ORCID iD
Author: Mirco Tonin

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