cover image: Welfare and the Act of Choosing

20.500.12592/8gtj0bw

Welfare and the Act of Choosing

1 Mar 2024

The standard revealed-preference approach to welfare economics encounters fundamental difficulties when the act of choosing directly affects welfare through emotions such as guilt, pride, and anxiety. We address this problem by developing an approach that redefines consumption bundles in terms of the sensations they produce, and measures welfare by blending choice-based methods with self-reported well-being techniques. In applications to classic social preferences paradigms, our approach shows that standard revealed-preference methods, including those that exploit choices over menus, mismeasure welfare because preferences depend on choice sets, while self-reported happiness and satisfaction are not sufficient statistics for welfare.
microeconomics public economics behavioral economics welfare and collective choice

Authors

B. Douglas Bernheim, Kristy Kim, Dmitry Taubinsky

Acknowledgements & Disclosure
We thank Dan Benjamin and Ori Heffetz, as well as seminar participants at UC Berkeley, Chicago, Harvard, and UC Santa Barbara for helpful comments. This project was supported by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. The experiment was determined exempt by the UC Berkeley IRB (CPHS protocol number 2021-07-14494). The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3386/w32200
Published in
United States of America