TY - JOUR
T1 - The acceptability of behavioural interventions in financial decision-making
AU - De Jonge, Patricia
AU - Ungureanu, Olga
AU - Zeelenberg, Marcel
AU - Verlegh, Peeter W.J.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Financial policymakers increasingly rely on behavioural insights to protect the interests of consumers. However, little is known about how citizens feel about interventions designed to nudge their financial behaviour. Most literature on the acceptability of behavioural interventions focuses on the health domain. To address this gap, we present the results of an experiment on the acceptability of seven financial behavioural interventions (N = 684, members of a panel of the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets). We investigate the role of the agent implementing the intervention (policymaker versus financial company) and perceived effectiveness in relation to the acceptability of these interventions. The acceptability of behavioural interventions in financial decision-making appears to be lower than the acceptability levels found in previous studies. We find no effect of the agent on acceptability. Perceived effectiveness is strongly correlated with acceptability, but only perceived effectiveness in influencing one s own decisions has a consistently positive relationship with acceptability. Perceived effectiveness in influencing others decisions has either no, a positive, or a negative relationship with acceptability. These results highlight that acceptability appears to be at least partly domain-specific and show that we have only just begun understanding the acceptability of behavioural interventions and its drivers.
AB - Financial policymakers increasingly rely on behavioural insights to protect the interests of consumers. However, little is known about how citizens feel about interventions designed to nudge their financial behaviour. Most literature on the acceptability of behavioural interventions focuses on the health domain. To address this gap, we present the results of an experiment on the acceptability of seven financial behavioural interventions (N = 684, members of a panel of the Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets). We investigate the role of the agent implementing the intervention (policymaker versus financial company) and perceived effectiveness in relation to the acceptability of these interventions. The acceptability of behavioural interventions in financial decision-making appears to be lower than the acceptability levels found in previous studies. We find no effect of the agent on acceptability. Perceived effectiveness is strongly correlated with acceptability, but only perceived effectiveness in influencing one s own decisions has a consistently positive relationship with acceptability. Perceived effectiveness in influencing others decisions has either no, a positive, or a negative relationship with acceptability. These results highlight that acceptability appears to be at least partly domain-specific and show that we have only just begun understanding the acceptability of behavioural interventions and its drivers.
KW - behavioural interventions
KW - financial decision-making
KW - nudging
KW - public acceptability
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U2 - 10.1017/bpp.2024.10
DO - 10.1017/bpp.2024.10
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85187928284
SN - 2398-063X
VL - 8
SP - 759
EP - 772
JO - Behavioural Public Policy
JF - Behavioural Public Policy
IS - 4
ER -