cover image: Intrapersonal Utility Comparisons as Interpersonal Utility Comparisons: Welfare, Ambiguity, and Robustness in Behavioral Policy Problems

20.500.12592/4i4zd69

Intrapersonal Utility Comparisons as Interpersonal Utility Comparisons: Welfare, Ambiguity, and Robustness in Behavioral Policy Problems

9 Aug 2024

We consider the optimal policy problem of a benevolent planner, who is uncertain about an individual's true preferences because of inconsistencies in revealed preferences across behavioral frames. We adapt theories of expected utility maximization and ambiguity aversion to characterize the planner's objective, which results in welfarist criteria similar to social welfare functions, with intrapersonal frames replacing interpersonal types. Under paternalistic risk aversion or ambiguity aversion, a policy is less desirable to the planner, holding all else fixed, when it leads to more disagreement about welfare from revealed preferences. We map some examples of behavioral models into our framework and describe how this notion of robustness plays out in applied settings.
microeconomics public economics poverty and wellbeing health, education, and welfare welfare and collective choice

Authors

Canishk Naik, Daniel Reck

Acknowledgements & Disclosure
For valuable discussions and comments, we thank Scott Elliott, Jacob Goldin, Louis Kaplow, Ben Lockwood, Yusufcan Masatlioglu, Emel Filiz-Ozbay, Alex Rees-Jones, Joel Slemrod, Luminita Stevens, and Dmitry Taubinsky. Canishk thankfully acknowledges financial support from the Economic and Social Research Council DTP [Grant No: ES/P000622/1]. The authors have no relevant material financial or other interests that relate to this research paper. 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/w32813
Pages
57
Published in
United States of America

Table of Contents