I Don’t Want to Hear About it: Rational Ignorance among Duty-Oriented Consumers

Published in

Memorandum No. 15, 2008, Department of Economics, University of Oslo

Abstract

Individuals with a preference for keeping moral obligations may dislike learning that voluntary contributions are socially valuable: Such information can trigger unpleasant feelings of cognitive dissonance. I show that if initial beliefs about the social value of contributions are suffciently low, duty-oriented consumers are willing to pay to avoid information. Attitude campaigns can increase contributions from such consumers by providing them with unwanted information. Consequentialist warm glow types with low initial beliefs, however, will seek low-cost information on their own initiative; thus, campaigns will have less effects for such consumers.

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By Karine Nyborg
Published Mar. 23, 2015 11:20 AM