The Bulletin
Business Growth
.

Business Reports

law professor Cass Sunstein, on why behavioural science is always nudging us

  • Written by Josh Nicholas, Deputy Editor: Business + Economy, The Conversation
law professor Cass Sunstein, on why behavioural science is always nudging us

What can governments do to stop increasing obesity rates, help people save or get them to file their tax returns on time? The default answer used to be some kind of tax or penalty. Just make people pay more and they’ll do the right thing, right?

But what if you could encourage certain behaviour without forcing the issue? That’s where nudges come in. These are small changes in design or presentation, like putting healthy food near the cash register, or sending reminders out around tax time.

For this episode of Speaking with, The Conversation’s Josh Nicholas chats with Cass Sunstein, a Harvard professor who worked as a “regulatory czar” for years in the Obama administration. Sunstein literally wrote the book on nudges[1] along with Richard Thaler, who won the 2017 economics Nobel Prize[2]. The book is called Nudge: Improving decisions about health, wealth and happiness.

Read more: The promise and perils of giving the public a policy 'nudge'[3]

As the controversial My Health Record[4] has shown, behavioural science is now considered a standard part of the public policy toolkit. My Health Record was created to be “opt out”, in order to “nudge[5]” people into remaining in the system.

This takes advantage of a bias we have towards the default setting: many of us won’t expend the effort to opt out. Many governments – including Australia’s – now have professional “nudge units[6]” stocked with behavioural scientists, working on problems such as tax avoidance and organ donation.

Today on Speaking with, Professor Sunstein talks about nudges and public policy, when and where they work and how policymakers should use them.

Subscribe[7] to The Conversation’s Speaking With podcasts on Apple Podcasts, or follow[8] on Tunein Radio.

Music

References

  1. ^ wrote the book on nudges (www.goodreads.com)
  2. ^ won the 2017 economics Nobel Prize (theconversation.com)
  3. ^ The promise and perils of giving the public a policy 'nudge' (theconversation.com)
  4. ^ controversial My Health Record (theconversation.com)
  5. ^ nudge (theconversation.com)
  6. ^ nudge units (theconversation.com)
  7. ^ Subscribe (itunes.apple.com)
  8. ^ follow (tunein.com)

Authors: Josh Nicholas, Deputy Editor: Business + Economy, The Conversation

Read more http://theconversation.com/speaking-with-law-professor-cass-sunstein-on-why-behavioural-science-is-always-nudging-us-101074

The Bulletin Magazine

Kangaroos as Controversial Pests: Is It Truly a Serious Pest Problem?

Find out the underlying truth behind the recent news wherein Kangaroos are now controversial pests and is there enough reason for Kangaroo Culli...

News Company - avatar News Company

How To Personalise Your SoundCloud Banner For Free In Minutes Using Adobe

Soundcloud is a platform that lets audio artists and musicians share their music. It also helps them track the demographics of their listeners.For a...

The Bulletin - avatar The Bulletin

30 Australian Recycling Statistics

Recycling has grown to become a very significant part of the Australian economy. With its growth, it's important that all family households unders...

The Bulletin - avatar The Bulletin