Freedom counts: cross-country empirical evidence
Freedom counts: cross-country empirical evidence
This paper investigates how people evaluate different sets of opportunities in terms of welfare and freedom of choice. To do this, we run a new survey-based study with 4,902 participants across 10 different countries, in which subjects face a series of theoretically-relevant binary comparisons of opportunity sets. Our analysis proceeds in two stages. We first use a naive Bayesian method to classify subjects according to the theoretical rules they implicitly employ to compare sets in terms of freedom and welfare. Then, we investigate whether subjects value freedom of choice even if more freedom does not lead to the choice of a better alternative (intrinsic value of freedom of choice). Our main result is that an overwhelming majority of subjects reveal attaching intrinsic value to freedom. We also find that a large majority of subjects use size-based rules to rank sets in terms of freedom, while there is considerable heterogeneity in the theoretical rules they employ to rank sets in terms of welfare. These results are strikingly robust across countries. All this suggests that it is important to offer choice to individuals in the design of organizations and public policies, even if this does not substantially change their choice behavior.
Freedom of choice, Welfare, Intrinsic value, Opportunity set, Cross-cultural survey
Ferreira, João V.
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Hanaki, Nobuyuki
33ae7fa6-d05c-41a1-94f8-36a95a68cdd4
Le Lec, Fabrice
29a02502-b249-4fb3-8dfd-351ec2016f51
Schokkaert, Erik
63623adc-0d08-4ff0-8c19-643288b32f1d
Tarroux, Benoît
3f76c7cb-5292-456f-b29c-cfbe3a43e77c
8 November 2023
Ferreira, João V.
0aad606a-eab0-473c-a230-9b3dfa2d7d93
Hanaki, Nobuyuki
33ae7fa6-d05c-41a1-94f8-36a95a68cdd4
Le Lec, Fabrice
29a02502-b249-4fb3-8dfd-351ec2016f51
Schokkaert, Erik
63623adc-0d08-4ff0-8c19-643288b32f1d
Tarroux, Benoît
3f76c7cb-5292-456f-b29c-cfbe3a43e77c
Ferreira, João V., Hanaki, Nobuyuki, Le Lec, Fabrice, Schokkaert, Erik and Tarroux, Benoît
(2023)
Freedom counts: cross-country empirical evidence
GATE Lyon St-Étienne
82pp.
Record type:
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Abstract
This paper investigates how people evaluate different sets of opportunities in terms of welfare and freedom of choice. To do this, we run a new survey-based study with 4,902 participants across 10 different countries, in which subjects face a series of theoretically-relevant binary comparisons of opportunity sets. Our analysis proceeds in two stages. We first use a naive Bayesian method to classify subjects according to the theoretical rules they implicitly employ to compare sets in terms of freedom and welfare. Then, we investigate whether subjects value freedom of choice even if more freedom does not lead to the choice of a better alternative (intrinsic value of freedom of choice). Our main result is that an overwhelming majority of subjects reveal attaching intrinsic value to freedom. We also find that a large majority of subjects use size-based rules to rank sets in terms of freedom, while there is considerable heterogeneity in the theoretical rules they employ to rank sets in terms of welfare. These results are strikingly robust across countries. All this suggests that it is important to offer choice to individuals in the design of organizations and public policies, even if this does not substantially change their choice behavior.
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More information
Published date: 8 November 2023
Keywords:
Freedom of choice, Welfare, Intrinsic value, Opportunity set, Cross-cultural survey
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 485360
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485360
PURE UUID: 2f653364-a402-4d1f-8422-79175e9babb1
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Date deposited: 05 Dec 2023 17:36
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:52
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Contributors
Author:
Nobuyuki Hanaki
Author:
Fabrice Le Lec
Author:
Erik Schokkaert
Author:
Benoît Tarroux
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