Incentives and Externalities: A Deep Dive into Behavioural Economics | All Else Equal #bigIdeas

Incentives and Externalities: A Deep Dive into Behavioural Economics | All Else Equal This episode of All Else Equal: Making Better Decisions delves into the profound influence of incentives on human behavior and the subsequent negative externalities that may…

Idea 03 of 09

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The ‘Crying Wolf’ Scenario

Officials often overstate the severity of weather emergencies, leading to unnecessary preparation and potential complacency in the face of a real emergency.

This ‘crying wolf’ scenario can be attributed to their incentive to avoid blame in case a severe weather event does occur.

People who ignore incentives, ignore incentives at their own peril. Because I think that there’s one truism about human behavior, it’s that humans respond to incentives. – Jonathan Berk

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  1. 01Incentives and Externalities: A Deep Dive into Behavioural Economics | All Else Equal
  2. 02The Inefficiency of Traffic Lights
  3. 03The ‘Crying Wolf’ Scenario
  4. 04The Issue of Drought Declarations
  5. 05Information Overload in the Digital Age
  6. 06Negativity in News Reporting
  7. 07The Long-Term Effects of Incentives
  8. 08The Importance of Group Achievements
  9. 09Addressing Specific Externalities

Showing The ‘Crying Wolf’ Scenario, idea 3 of 9.