Self-Control and Demand for Preventive Health: Evidence from Hypertension in India

Author:

Bai Liang1,Handel Benjamin2,Miguel Edward2,Rao Gautam3

Affiliation:

1. King's College London and University of Edinburgh

2. University of California, Berkeley and NBER

3. Harvard University and NBER

Abstract

Abstract Self-control problems constitute a potential explanation for the underinvestment in preventive health in low-income countries. Behavioral economics offers a tool to solve such problems: commitment devices. We conduct a field experiment to evaluate the effectiveness of different types of theoretically motivated commitment contracts in increasing preventive doctor visits by hypertensive patients in rural India. Despite achieving high take-up of such contracts in some treatment arms, we find no effects on actual doctor visits or individual health outcomes. A substantial number of individuals pay for commitment but fail to follow through on the doctor visit, losing money without experiencing health benefits. We develop and structurally estimate a prespecified model of consumer behavior under present bias with varying levels of naiveté. The results are consistent with a large share of individuals being partially naive about their own self-control problems: sophisticated enough to demand some commitment but overly optimistic about whether a given level of commitment is sufficiently strong to be effective. The results suggest that commitment devices may in practice be welfare diminishing, at least in some contexts, and serve as a cautionary tale about their role in health care.

Publisher

MIT Press - Journals

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference31 articles.

1. Commitment vs. Flexibility,;Amador;Econometrica,2006

2. Using Preference Estimates to Customize Incentives: An Application to Polio Vaccination Drives in Pakistan;Andreoni;NBER working paper,2016

3. Tying Odysseus to the Mast: Evidence from a Commitment Savings Product in the Philippines,;Ashraf;Quarterly Journal of Economics,2006

4. Epidemiology of Hypertension;Association of Physicians of India;Journal of the Association of Physicians of India,2013

5. Management of Hypertension;Association of Physicians of India;Journal of the Association of Physicians of India,2013

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