Do Self-Committers Mind Other-Imposed Commitment? An Experiment on Weak Paternalism

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Date
2011Author
Uhl, Matthias
Quotable link
http://dx.doi.org/10.22029/jlupub-380Abstract
This experiment investigates whether protégés judge paternalism by means of its consequences or on principled grounds. Subjects receive a payment for showing up early the next morning. The later they show up the less they get. Protégés can self-commit to a specific show-up time or maintain spontaneity. By making this binary choice, protégés ... express their preference for liberty. Simultaneously, their patron is either paternalistic or liberal by making this choice on their behalf. We investigate whether self-committers’ willingness to restrict their own freedom predicts their attitudes toward paternalism.
Original publication in
Rationality, markets, and morals: RMM 2 (2011), 13-34