Are non-contingent incentives more effective in motivating new behavior? Evidence from the field
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2021Metadata
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Córdova, Angélica
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Are non-contingent incentives more effective in motivating new behavior? Evidence from the field
Abstract
Organizations and policymakers increasingly rely on economic incentives to prompt
participation in activities amongst those who were previously not engaged. We ran a field
experiment with a recycling program to examine incentives' effectiveness to motivate new
behavior—i.e., attract non-recyclers. We compared standard contingent incentives (payment
contingent on recycling) to non-contingent incentives (upfront unconditional payment) of
different sizes. A high contingent incentive was as effective as a non-contingent incentive (of
any size) in attracting people to the program, but this masked differences in who participated.
Across incentive sizes, people who had never recycled were 5.8 times more likely to begin
recycling with the program when given a non-contingent incentive (20.2%) than when
offered a contingent one (3.5%). A second experiment conceptually replicated this effect in
an online job market, showing that non-contingent incentives were substantially more
effective in attracting previous non-compliers.
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ANID FONDECYT 1191745
Complex Engineering Systems Institute ANID APOYO/BASAL AFB180003
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Artículo de publícación WoS
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Games and Economic Behavior Volume 130 Page 602-615 Nov 2021
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