This radio program came to my attention because it features some ideas put forth by Dan Ariely,Professor, Duke University, he explains some of his theories.
The Invisible Hand: Perverse Incentives
by Matthew Lazin - Ryder
CBC RADIO Podcast
Incentives are the rewards you get for engaging in certain behaviours. They are often created by governments or other organizations to encourage people to act in a certain way, without mandating the behaviour. For example, you may get a tax break if you donate to a charity. But incentives can also be created unintentionally, and they can have unexpected and negative consequences. In this case, they can create the opposite effect to the one they are intended to have. Economists call these perverse incentives. In this episode, Carleton University economist Frances Woolley guides us through some examples of perverse incentives, and how politicians and policy makers can use these anomalies to create better outcomes in the future. We'll explore how the fields of crime prevention, pest control, and even the dog show circuit, have all provided valuable lessons from incentives that have gone rogue.
Source: http://www.cbc.ca/theinvisiblehand/episodes/2012/08/22/episode-nine-perverse-incentives/ Men and Markets Observed Episode Nine: Perverse Incentives | The Invisible Hand with Matthew Lazin-Ryde | CBC Radio Episode Nine: Perverse Incentives | The Invisible Hand with Matthew Lazin-Ryde | CBC Radio
Dan Ariely, James B. Duke Professor of Behavioral Economics, is someone who has been featured in this blog when we posted his T.E.D. Lectures.
Best-selling Author, The (Honest) Truth About Dishonesty, The Upside of Irrationality and Predictably Irrational.
"An expert on how people actually act—and why they act—in business and economic environments, professor and best-selling author Dan Ariely shows what human behavior means for business innovation, strategy, marketing and pricing."
The Invisible Hand: Perverse Incentives
by Matthew Lazin - Ryder
CBC RADIO Podcast
photo credit: eschipul
Homo Economicus 2.0 Podcast Economists often use models to explain economic theory at work. In the simplest models, we humans are depicted as coldly rational beings who compute all our options, and act in our own self interest. This prototype of a person is called Homo Economicus. New thinking, however, is giving us a much more well-rounded view of human behaviour within economics.
In this episode we reveal a new model of a man, Homo Economicus 2.0. [MP3 file: runs 27 minutes]
In this episode we reveal a new model of a man, Homo Economicus 2.0. [MP3 file: runs 27 minutes]
Incentives are the rewards you get for engaging in certain behaviours. They are often created by governments or other organizations to encourage people to act in a certain way, without mandating the behaviour. For example, you may get a tax break if you donate to a charity. But incentives can also be created unintentionally, and they can have unexpected and negative consequences. In this case, they can create the opposite effect to the one they are intended to have. Economists call these perverse incentives. In this episode, Carleton University economist Frances Woolley guides us through some examples of perverse incentives, and how politicians and policy makers can use these anomalies to create better outcomes in the future. We'll explore how the fields of crime prevention, pest control, and even the dog show circuit, have all provided valuable lessons from incentives that have gone rogue.
http://www.cbc.ca/theinvisiblehand/index.xml |
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