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Responsibility utility and the difference between preference and desirance: implications for welfare evaluation

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Citation

Comerford DA & Lades LK (2022) Responsibility utility and the difference between preference and desirance: implications for welfare evaluation. Social Choice and Welfare, 58 (2), pp. 201-224. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00355-021-01352-9

Abstract
Actions can provide “responsibility utility” when they signal the actors’ identities or values to others or to themselves. This paper considers a novel implication of this responsibility utility for welfare analysis: fully informed incentive-compatible choice data can give a biased measure of the utility delivered by exogenously determined outcomes. A person’s choice of a policy outcome may be informed by responsibility utility that would be strictly absent if that same person were a passive recipient of that same policy outcome. We introduce the term “desirance” to describe a rank ordering over exogenously determined outcomes and present evidence that desirance captures the welfare consequences of exogenously determined outcomes more accurately than preference. We review literatures showing that preference is sensitive to contextual variations that influence responsibility utility and show experimentally that responsibility utility can explain discrepancies between welfare estimates derived from choice data and subjective well-being data. We close by discussing subjective well-being as a potential measure of desirance.

Journal
Social Choice and Welfare: Volume 58, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date28/02/2022
Publication date online27/07/2021
Date accepted by journal02/07/2021
URL
ISSN0176-1714
eISSN1432-217X

People (2)

Professor David Comerford

Professor David Comerford

Professor, Economics

Professor Leonhard Lades

Professor Leonhard Lades

Professor in Economics, Economics

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