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On the 'cashing out' hypothesis and 'soft' and 'hard' policies

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Authors

Brennan, H. Geoffrey
Brooks, Michael

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Elsevier

Abstract

In the literature on paternalism that has grown out of the behavioural economics 'revolution', a distinction is drawn between 'hard' and 'soft' policies. Although this hard/soft distinction seems to be motivated by the thought that the two policy types might have different implications for individual liberty, there is a claim that 'hard' policies are normatively superior to 'soft' for 'efficiency' reasons. We show, by appeal to an esteem-based model of 'soft' policy that this claim is not valid in general. We also expose a number of conceptual mistakes in what many seem to have identified as the normative implications of behavioural economics.

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Citation

Source

European Journal of Political Economy

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Restricted until

2037-12-31