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What did ‘Nudge’ get wrong? With Nick Chater

What did ‘Nudge’ get wrong? With Nick Chater

Small interventions only have a small effect

The Economics Show · Financial Times

February 20, 202629m 59s

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Show Notes

When Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein released their book ‘Nudge’ in 2008, it caught the public imagination. ‘Nudge theory’ – the idea that people could be encouraged to make better choices through small, subtle interventions – was innovative, and exciting. A decade and a half later, a whole lot of nudging seems to have come to a whole lot of nothing. Why wasn’t ‘nudge theory’ more help in tackling climate change, or helping people enroll in pensions? And, even if it hasn’t saved the world, does behavioural science still have a role in policymaking? Former member of the UK’s Behavioural Insights Team and professor of behavioural science, Nick Chater, reflects on the legacy of nudges.


Related Links

Can we ‘nudge’ our way to higher growth?

The uses — and the limits — of ‘nudge’ economics

What nudge theory got wrong


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