Default Effects And Follow-On Behaviour: Evidence From An Electricity Pricing Program

Author:

Fowlie Meredith1,Wolfram Catherine1,Baylis Patrick2,Spurlock C Anna3,Todd-Blick Annika3,Cappers Peter3

Affiliation:

1. UC Berkeley and NBER

2. University of British Columbia

3. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Abstract

Abstract We study default effects in the context of a residential electricity-pricing program. In the large-scale randomized controlled trial we analyse, one treatment group was given the option to opt-in to time-varying pricing while another was defaulted into the program but allowed to opt-out. We provide dramatic evidence of a default effect on program participation, consistent with previous research. A novel feature of our study is that we also observe how the default manipulation impacts customers’ subsequent electricity consumption. Passive consumers who did not opt-out but would not have opted in—comprising more than 70$\%$ of the sample—nonetheless reduce consumption in response to higher prices. Observing of this follow-on behaviour enables us to assess competing explanations for the default effect. We draw conclusions about the likely welfare effects of defaulting customers onto time-varying pricing.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

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