If Books Could Kill - "Nudge" Part 1: A Simple Solution For Littering, Organ Donations and Climate Change
Episode Date: May 4, 2023In 2008, an economist and a law professor proposed a radical new approach to politics: Telling people not to do bad stuff.Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/IfBooksPodWhere to find us:Â Tw...itterPeter's other podcast, 5-4Mike's other podcast, Maintenance PhaseSources:Mike's Maintenance Phase episode on the godfather of the "cafeteria nudge"Nudge: Concept, Effectiveness, and EthicsFrom mechanism to virtue: Evaluating Nudge theoryThe effectiveness of nudging: A meta-analysis of choice architecture interventions across behavioral domainsWhy the Most Important Idea in Behavioral Decision-Making Is a FallacyBehavioral WinterWhy Is Behavioral Economics So Popular?The Origins of Anti-Litter CampaignsDo Normative Appeals Affect Tax Compliance? Evidence from a Controlled Experiment in MinnesotaOpt-out legislations: the mysterious viability of the falseOpt-out policies capacity to increase organ donors is limitedAssessing Global Organ Donation Policies: Opt-In vs Opt-OutWhat Counts as a Nudge?Preventing Secondary Pregnancy In Adolescents: A Model ProgramThe Effect of Monetary Incentives and Peer Support Groups on Repeat Adolescent Pregnancies A Randomized Trial of the Dollar-a-Day ProgramThe i-frame and the s-frame: How focusing on individual-level solutions has led behavioral public policy astrayCan behavioural economics make us healthier?On the Supposed Evidence for Libertarian PaternalismThanks to Mindseye for our theme song!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Wait, do I say first or do you say first?
Uh, you say first.
I was about to say Michael, huh?
Shit.
Great start.
Uh, Peter.
Michael.
What do you know about a book called Nudge?
Is it about how whenever I see Cass Sunstein's name,
I want to nudge myself off a cliff?
So as we were workshopping your zinger, I was surprised to learn that you don't know anything about this book, Peter.
This one just sort of like, lured together with all the other verb books, you know?
Remember that?
We had like, blink and then there's nudge.
Every book for a few years was just a verb.
It's like, honk, how to let the guy in front of you know that you want them to go faster.
Yeah.
I don't understand what this era of books was.
And I was surprised that we were getting so many requests for this book because I had
only really vaguely heard of it.
I don't know anything about it.
It's different from other books we've covered recently in that it wasn't like a huge bestseller.
I mean, it did sell a lot of copies,
but like nowhere on the order of the secret or rich dad.
But I would argue that this is one of the most influential
books of the 2000s.
It's part of the entire TED talkification
of American intellectual life that happened around this time
where everything was like a cute little rule.
You thought it was this, but it's actually this.
Yeah.
So the full title of the book is Nudge,
colon, improving decisions about health, wealth,
and happiness.
It's by Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein,
one of whom is a University of Chicago economist,
and the other is a Harvard law professor.
Almost immediately after this book,
Cass Sunstein gets a very high profile role
in the Obama administration.
And nine years after this book comes out,
Richard Thaler wins the Nobel Prize
for the kind of work that this book contains.
Okay.
This whole kind of concept of nudging
gets taken up by numerous actual countries.
So the UK famously had a Nudge Unit, America had a Nudge Unit that is headed by Cass
Sunstein.
According to some of the academic stuff that I read, 51 countries set up like Nudge
Units within their governments to do this kind of policy make.
I don't even know what it is yet, and I'm still upset.
Nudge units.
So this episode is going to be a little bit different in that we're going to spend the first
like third to one half talking about what is good about this idea.
Okay.
At the core of this, I think is like a true insight.
We're going to start with basically laying out the basic idea of a nudge.
Okay.
So, I'm going to send you the first couple paragraphs of the book.
All right. A friend of yours, Carolyn, is the director of food services for a large city school
system. One evening, she and her friend Adam, a statistically oriented management consultant,
who has worked with supermarket chains, hasht an interesting idea. Without changing any menus,
they would run some experiments in her schools to determine whether the way the food is displayed and arranged might influence the choice's kids make.
In some schools, the desserts were placed first, in others last, and still others in a separate
line. In some schools, the French fries were at eye level, in others, the carrot sticks.
Simply by rearranging the cafeteria, Carolyn was able to increase or decrease the
consumption of many food items by as much as 25%.
Boom, nudged.
Only an economist and a law professor could think that this was a cool way to start a hot
pop science book.
We're talking about the carrots. We're starting with carrots.
So this is essentially the core insight of the book.
And I think this is fucking true.
Sure.
The way that things are presented to us and how our options are described changes the choices
that we make.
Like all of us think that we're free actors and we just choose, I'm going to eat carrots
or I'm going to eat a cookie.
But of course those are profoundly affected by things like cost, visibility, we're nudged,
God, I just use the fucking word, we're nudged
into various choices through these like invisible structures all the fucking times.
It's one of those things where you might not know the precise mechanics of something.
Right.
But you had the general sense that this sort of thing was true, right?
Right.
That the order in which information is presented to you affects how you process it, etc.
Right.
And there's a million other examples of this.
Like, one of the big ones is that road design
sort of teaches you how fast you're supposed to go.
The width of the lane and how sharp the corners are,
you're like, this feels like a 25 mile an hour road
versus this feels like a 50 mile an hour road.
That's true.
That's why in 2005, when I was ticketed for going 51 in what I later found out was a 25,
it had the vibes of a 45.
Those kids were asking for it. Those kids that you flattened.
I got nudged. I got nudged into that ticket and no one's talking about it.
So they then delineate a little bit more about this example. So once you realize that your choices
of what foods to put next to the cash register have a profound impact on what people buy,
the question then becomes like, what do you do with that information, right? And they talk about like Carolyn's decision-making strategy, right?
That she is going to pick a theory of how to arrange the food, right? So she can arrange it to maximize profits for the cafeteria.
Yeah. So she can arrange it to maximize profits for the cafeteria. She can arrange it to maximize nutrition for the kids.
The main insight that they're trying to lead you to
is that any theory that she uses to arrange the food
is going to be a nudge.
There is no non-manipulative way to present options to people, basically.
Right.
So I'm going to send you one more paragraph.
This is the conclusion of this section.
This is as good as the book gets,
and then it's going to start to trail off into nonsense.
So I really want to dwell on the non-nonsense parts.
Carolyn is what we will be calling a choice architect.
A choice architect has the responsibility
for organizing the context in which people make decisions.
Although Carolyn is a figment of our imagination, many real people turn out to be choice architects,
most without realizing it.
If you design the ballot voters use to choose candidates, you are a choice architect.
If you are a doctor and must describe the treatments available to a patient, you are a choice architect.
If you design the form that new employees
fill out to an enroll in the company health care plan, you are a choice architect. If you are a sales
person, you are a choice architect, but you already knew that. There's a real lesson here, I think,
for policymakers, right, that it's become kind of a slur for policymakers to talk about something
as ideological, but there's no non-ideological way to design systems.
Like if you design an intersection with traffic lights
or with stop signs, those are both architectures
that are going to produce predictable outcomes.
But they're both equally ideological.
Yeah.
All of this is fine.
Ideology just means that we have values and morality
that guide our decisions.
It does feel like a lot of this,
like I think, for example, using the ballot example,
this is post-Bush-V-Gor, like everyone knows that the way you structure a ballot is important.
Yeah.
But I do think that there's a utility to just putting a vocabulary onto this stuff where
it's like you're a choice architect, right?
And then, like, you know, whoever is doing this stuff has like a basic framework such that they can maybe
see what they're doing a little more accurately.
The rest of the introduction they spend defining this,
they don't call it an ideology, but basically their idea.
And they define it as libertarian paternalism.
Okay.
They talk a lot about how, if people were able
to choose it for themselves, a lot of people kind of like wouldn't smoke
Uh-huh, you know most people want to eat more fruits and vegetables and so what policymakers should be doing is designing environments to
Encourage the choice that people themselves would make yeah, yeah, they define a nudge as
Any aspect of the choice architecture that alters people's behavior in a predictable
way without forbidding any options or significantly changing their economic incentives.
To count as a mere nudge, the intervention must be easy and cheap to avoid.
Nudges are not mandates.
Putting the fruit at eye-level counts as a nudge.
Bannning junk food does not. In the micro, this is very correct and harmless to me,
but I can already see the burgeoning technocratic monstrosity
that is going to emerge based on this shit.
We're on page like seven.
The book is slowly building the monstrosity, basically. So,
the first section of the book is basically laying out like the structure of why this happens.
We're not going to go super duper into this because eventually we're going to talk about
Daniel Connamens thinking fast and slow, which is essentially the same thing. The basic idea is
that human beings are not rational, benefit maximizers, right?
The economist, traditional economist understanding
of behavior is that we're just sort of looking around
at all of our options and you're like,
that's gonna give me the most utils.
That obviously is not how humans behave.
And the second insight of the book
is that we behave in predictably irrational ways.
We know that people are gonna grab a brownie
if it's next to the cash register.
We know that people aren't gonna sign up
for a retirement plan.
If it's hidden in their employment papers on page 17.
The basis of all of this is basically these two systems.
Have you heard of this, this system one and system two thing?
No.
So this is the day and the economy and work about how you have one system of your brain is like
reflexive.
It's kind of like your lizard brain just like operating on instinct, even though
lizard brains are fake and you can listen to maintenance about that.
And then there's like the reflective system.
So it's like you have these like little impulses and then you're like, wait a minute.
I should think this through.
They illustrate this with a couple of math problems,
which I am going to make you do.
Fuck.
I know.
I'm sending these to you because they're much easier to do
if you can actually see the numbers in front of you.
Okay.
Oh, God.
This is, I'm gonna fuck it up.
You can fuck it up.
This is gonna be embarrassing.
Get your reflective system.
Get, get ready.
I want to tell you, there was a time when I was good at math.
I don't know what happened. But when I was like in third grade, I was a
widge. They put me in a little mini group with the smart kids.
One kid was valedictorian.
The other went to Yale.
And then there was me, the guy who did the most shrooms before graduation.
All right.
A batten ball cost a dollar and 10 cents in total. The bat cost
one dollar more than the ball. How much does the ball cost? What are your different systems?
Five cents, is that right? Yes, it is. Yeah. That's right. There was, I was channeling
through a grade Peter. So most people say it costs a dollar. They just say a dollar because you're just doing like neuron.
Yeah, you're like, there's like association.
You see a dollar 10, you see a dollar, there's an extra 10 cents.
And you basically subtract one number from the other and you're like, ah, 10 cents, right?
And that's your, that's your instinctive system.
Right. There's one more, Peter.
Let's see if you get this one.
Let's see if you're still gifted.
Oh, fuck, they're getting harder.
If it takes five machines, five minutes to make five widgets, how long would it take?
100 machines to make 100 widgets.
Five minutes? Yes. Because each one is taking a...
This is why I get to be a podcast host, right? The tippy top of the intelligentsia because I am unfazed
by these things. The little lizard inside of you just absolutely owned.
That's right.
I don't actually need the reflective part of my brain.
System two, not necessary.
So this is what most of the first third of the book is about.
Is delineating all of the ways in which we are
predictably irrational, right?
So one of the things they mention is this concept of anchoring.
This is why oftentimes on menus, the restaurant will have a $200 bottle of wine, which then
kind of makes you think, oh, maybe the $75 bottle of wine isn't that much, right?
It's not the most expensive.
They also have one about framing, if you're about to get a surgical procedure and the doctor says of 100 patients who
have this operation 90 are alive after five years. That affects your choice much more than of the 100
patients who have this procedure 10 are dead after five years. This one I actually thought was pretty
interesting. It says in one experiment college students were asked two questions. How happy are you
and how often are you dating?
When the two questions were asked in this order,
the correlation between the two questions
was non-existent.
But when the question order was reversed
so the dating question was asked first,
the correlation was much higher.
Right, because you're being reminded of something
that you think should map onto your happiness, right?
So you're like, if you just get asked,
how happy are you, you're like,
I'm pretty happy and then they ask you,
like how often you're dating and then you're like,
oh right, I'm not getting late at all.
I forgot about that.
But if you get asked that first,
you are reminded that you're a big loser.
You're talking loser, I think I'm gonna date
in like a week or whatever.
Yeah, and then it impacts your next research.
Exactly.
Okay, yeah, sure.
Again, a very important insight.
And I think for like public opinion surveys,
the way they do political polling,
we know that the way that you word a question,
the order of the questions,
is like profoundly impactful on like
what people say their preferences are.
How do you feel about trans rights?
How often are you dating?
Ha, ha, ha, ha.
And then there's, are you familiar with this loss aversion thing?
I'm familiar with the concept of loss aversion, sure.
What is it?
It's aversion to loss.
It's very sophisticated stuff, Peter.
I don't know if you get it completely.
No, the loss aversion means that you're,
I'm trying not to use the word aversion,
but you're impacted by loss more than gain.
Right. Losing a dollar hurts more than gaining a dollar.
Exactly.
Feels good.
Again, not groundbreaking stuff, but like one of the reasons I think these things don't
feel so groundbreaking is because pop economics has become so widespread.
Yeah, that's fair.
But like the reason these are kind of boring to us is like because of books like Nudge.
Like I know that I can bend the universe to my will
using my mind because of the secret.
Einstein tells us the world emerged from thought.
Before we get to kind of complicating this a little bit more,
we get a couple examples.
So the big one that this shows up in like almost all
of the articles about this is in the
Skipoll airport in the Netherlands, they added little flies to the urinal because that
way the men had like something to aim for.
Is that why some urinals have little fucking flies in them?
Yeah, this is why.
So apparently the guy that designed this was in the military before and in the military
they put a red dot in the toilets.
And so he was like, oh, let's try this in the airport. And apparently it reduced spillage by 80% and
reduced cleaning costs by 8%. That's true. If you don't put something for me to aim for in a
urinal, I barely aim. You know, it's just flying all over the place. I just spin around like I'm
swing dancing, just constantly just twirling. I love this because it makes us look so stupid.
I know.
You're literally pissing in an airport.
You're like, ooh, I can name for that little fly,
but no, that works.
In an interview with the airport guy,
he also says you can like put a brick of wood in there
because men try to like turn it around with their pee,
like if it's like a little wood chip.
Oh, that is incredible.
People try to do like little tricks.
That makes sense though, that, because that's fun.
That's just got fun.
You just want a little sense of accomplishment in your life.
You get out of the bathroom and your wife's like,
hey, how was it?
You're like, really good, really good.
Flip to wood chip.
Flip in wood chips today.
So there's other examples, so people think that a door is pull rather than push depending on
the shape of the handle. ATMs have started doing this thing where they give you your card back
before your cash because they know that after you get your cash you're like I'm done here and then
you leave your card in the machine. And then the biggest one that they use and that comes up in
every single TED Talk PDF, whatever about nudges is organ
donations. Are you familiar with this one?
No, I mean something about the default choice for organ donations.
Yes. So there's a whole kind of story that goes along with this, right, where people
are looking at organ donor rates in various countries. And it's like some countries
are like 15% and some countries are like 80%.
And they're like, what could explain this, right?
Like, is it culture?
Are there better public information campaigns?
Like there's billboards in some countries.
In the book, they note that in Germany,
it's 12% of people are organ donors.
And in Austria, it's 99%.
Okay.
And it turns out on the form at the DMV or whatever the equivalent is, some countries
have, if you would like to be an organ donor, take the box, and some countries have, if
you would like not to be an organ donor, take the box.
And it turns out, people just don't like ticking boxes.
Mm-hmm.
So if you redesign these forms, you can get the number of organ donors, like triple quadruple,
like huge profound effects. This is at the heart of the selling point of nudges. You can get
around politics, right? You don't have to spend any more money. All you have to do is change the
default on the form. This feels a lot more meaningful than like we will help reduce the piss bladder and airport
bath.
Right.
So as we get into sort of complicating all of this stuff, I think head talks and the way
that these lessons get truncated and spread is a huge part of this, right?
Because if you're given this in like a little short, you know, whatever, six minute animated
explainer video or something,
but the benefits of behavior like economics, you're like, wow, think of all the other things,
right, that this could help.
But then if you actually sit down and think of the other things,
organ donation actually differs from other political issues in very significant ways, right?
So what we're essentially talking about here with this organ donation example is filling out a form.
We would like people to fill out a form differently.
Most political issues don't involve filling out forms.
Right, you can't nudge people into supporting gay rights
in quite the same way.
Exactly, we're not ticking boxes for most political issues.
And also 97% of the population thinks
that being an organ donor is good.
It's not politicized
at all. It's like it's like asking people like, do you like puppies?
So using this as the sort of archetypal example is perhaps overstating the promise of the
nudge. It's the same thing with the math problems, I feel like, where yes, you look at the
math problems, your reflective system is like, oh, this is the wrong answer. And then you
think about it a little bit more. Right, but is a word problem really a useful metaphor
for solving much larger problems?
It's just your brain doing really quick associations, right?
You're not.
It's not really math.
It's one of my favorite things when I'm researching episodes is finding an academic who's
like on a crusade to debunk the book that I'm looking into. When I was researching
this, I found a researcher named David Gaul who's like spent years now basically trying to debunk
this book and like all of these like underlying concepts, things like sunk cost fallacy, framing
effects, loss of version, etc. I gave him a call and had him walk me through his work
and kind of where the field is.
The first thing that he pointed out is basically
that like this whole idea of economists think
we're all rational, but it turns out we're irrational.
That's kind of a straw man.
I'm not really in the business of like defending
the economics field very often, but like as early as the 1970s,
people were winning Nobel prizes in economics
for showing this.
Right, you're having this sort of battle
in the mind of the public that took place
in economics 40 years prior.
They're doing the same thing that the Frekenomics guys did
where it's more maverick economists pushing back.
But again, this is a Harvard Law professor
and a University of Chicago Professor.
This behavior like anomic stuff is like very much
part of the establishment at this point.
David Gaul also pointed out that like what this really represents,
this whole kind of behavior like anomics pop economics turn,
is really a triumph of marketing.
People in this field were able to define
what are essentially psychological
principles, right? This is this kind of thing that was in psych textbooks when I was
majoring in that in college as economics principles, right? As something that takes on the same
kind of legitimacy as like, you know, GDP figures or like the much more quantitative
work that economists are traditionally doing. So David Gaul has mostly looked into this loss aversion thing.
He says in one of his papers, he says,
there's no general cognitive bias that leads people
to avoid losses more vigorously than to pursue gains.
Price increases do not impact consumer behavior
more than price decreases.
Messages that frame an appeal in terms of a loss
are no more persuasive than messages
that frame an appeal in terms of a gain.
It is true that big financial losses can be more impactful than big financial gains, in terms of a loss are no more persuasive than messages that frame an appeal in terms of a gain.
It is true that big financial losses can be more impactful than big financial gains, but
this is not a cognitive bias that requires a loss of version explanation.
If losing $10,000 means giving up the roof over your head, whereas gaining $10,000 means
going on an extra vacation, it is perfectly rational to be more concerned with the loss
than the gain.
Likewise, there are other situations where losses are more consequential than gains,
but these require specific explanations,
not blanket statements about a loss aversion bias.
This is why pop science sucks.
Kind of, right?
The appeal of pop science.
Is this like general sense that you are now
one of the smart ones with the secret knowledge?
And it's like, no, of course not, right like I mean you have to think about that for a second
Of course you're not you're just some guy who's reading a book right? It's just a way in which these types of books are
Just ego padding for like the formerly gifted children
remarkable what David Gaul told me with like all of these
Concepts right which are just psych concepts,
are just they apply in some cases,
and do not apply in other cases.
Like everything fucking else,
it's like sometimes loss of version
is an interesting rubric to use
to understand human behavior.
Sometimes it's not,
and it's not always clear in advance,
whether it's going to be useful.
But it's the aesthetic of counterintuitiveness
that people find so appealing in this shit.
This is a very good point
because what this book is like pretending to be doing
is like we're pushing back against
the overconfident predictions of these fucking economists
who think that we're all rational actors, right?
But actually, we can make overconfident predictions
about people behaving irrationally.
Right. Right. Right.
They're reproducing the central error,
they're just reproducing it in like follow-R rules,
not their rules.
Yeah, that's a really good point.
I think that the,
hmm, God, I have a half-formed thought about this.
You could just say Mike, you're right, and very handsome.
You're correct. Everyone likes you.
All right. Yeah, just for cool.
Why don't you record me saying that in various tones, and then we can just... very handsome. You're correct. Everyone wants you. All right. Yeah, just for cool.
Why don't you record me saying that in various tones?
And then we can just...
I just have a sound board.
Yeah.
It'll be like a little John sound board.
Given enough time, you won't need a podcast co-host.
That's what I'm working toward.
Goddamn it.
Part two of the book is like the middle third of the book is all about social influence.
So one of the main ways that we are predictably irrational
is we're subject to all kinds of conformity bias.
Are you familiar with the study where it was like
a bunch of people in a room and there's an optical illusion
where like one line is very obviously longer
than the other line and you're in a room
with like six other people
and they're like they're the same length.
They're the same length.
And then by the time it gets to you,
you're like, oh, they're the same length. They're the same length. And then by the time it gets to you, you're like, uh, they're the same length,
even though you know that's not true.
I'm not familiar with the study,
but I would absolutely pretend to think
they were the same length, so I understand it.
So to illustrate this point,
this goes through a couple chapters,
but the three main examples that he uses,
first is a grad student.
There's a grad student in the same department
as Richard Thaler, and he needs to finish his PhD,
and he knows he needs to finish his PhD. He's not a full professor until he finishes his PhD,
but he just can't get the gumption to do it. And he's missing out on like retirement matching benefits,
which is worth something like $10,000 a year. Really big monetary incentive for him to finish his PhD,
and yet he can do it. But then Richard Thaler comes up with this innovative idea. He says, why don't you write me a bunch of checks and post date them?
So like March 1st, April 1st, May 1st. And if you don't give me a chapter of your PhD every month,
I will cash the checks. You will be paying me. And so within the six months, this grad student
is able to finish his PhD. Yeah, because he has a reverse job.
Yeah.
The whole reason they joined, they went to grad school
was to avoid having a job,
and yet he's been tricked into sort of having one.
We then get a genuinely pretty interesting example
of a tax compliance experiment in Minnesota,
which I'm gonna send to you.
Okay.
In the context of tax compliance,
a real-world experiment conducted by officials in Minnesota, which I'm going to send to you. Okay. In the context of tax compliance, a real-world experiment conducted by officials in Minnesota
produced big changes in behavior.
Groups of taxpayers were given four kinds of information.
Some were told that their taxes went to various good works,
including education, police protection, and fire protection.
I can already tell you that one didn't work.
Others were threatened with information
about the risk of punishment for non-compliance.
Others were given information about how they might get help
if they were uncertain about how to fill out their tax forms.
Still others were just told that more than 90%
of Minnesotans already complied in full
with their obligations under the tax law.
Only one of these interventions had a significant effect
on tax compliance, and it was the last.
Apparently, some taxpayers are more likely to violate the law because of a misperception
plausibly based on the availability of media or other accounts of cheaters that the level
of compliance is pretty low.
So, okay.
This is the use of social conformity to get good outcomes.
So if you think other people comply with their taxes,
you're like, oh shit, I should comply with my taxes.
They're doing a little bit of ball hiding
as usual with like all of the anecdotes in this book.
They say only one of the letters produced a significant effect.
What they mean is statistically significant.
The difference between the people who got this letter
and the control group was $12.
They paid $12 more in taxes.
And it turns out that with these four letters,
when you split people into subgroups, right?
Of like different kinds of professions
are like much more likely to cheat on their taxes
than others.
Once you break out people who needed an adjustment the previous year,
which might mean that they like tried to cheat and got caught,
the most effective letter was actually the one threatening them with an audit.
Okay.
That produced $700 extra dollars in tax payments.
Okay.
And there is a subgroup for whom this like social letter, whatever,
produced a $275 increase.
The actual lesson here is that when you split people
up into groups, different messages work.
Right, you're not necessarily playing
to some broad-based human tendencies.
There are different impacts across different demographics
and whatever.
So again, the only real rule you can pull out of this
is it depends.
Different messages work for different people.
Okay.
Then the third example they give us,
we're gonna spend more time on this one.
Are you familiar Peter with where the phrase
don't mess with Texas comes from?
I guess not.
This was an anti-litering campaign in the 1980s.
I love that they turn that into just like a really obnoxious
declaration of loyalty to their state.
I know.
Add some AR-15s, and it just becomes like general purpose.
So basically, the story here is that the Texas Department
of Transport was getting very frustrated in the 1970s and 1980s
with like the sheer amount of roadside littering.
OK.
Nudge says, many of the literers were men
between the ages of 18 and 24,
who were not exactly impressed by the idea
that a bureaucratic elite wanted them
to change their behavior.
Public officials decided that they needed a tough,
talking slogan that would also address
the unique spirit of Texas pride.
Explicitly targeting the unresponsive audience,
the state enlisted popular Dallas Cowboys football players to participate in television ads in which they collected litter, smashed beer cans in their bare hands, and growled don't mess with Texas.
Okay.
Within the first year of the campaign, litter in the state had been reduced by a remarkable 29%.
In its first six years, there was a 72% reduction in visible roadside litter.
All this happened, not through mandates, threats, or coercion,
but through a creative nudge.
Okay, sorry, I can't get over the fact
that an anti-littering campaign was turned into like,
a vague threat of violence towards non-texans.
It's so American, it's just so essentially American.
So, okay, we are going to watch together
the first advertisement for the Don't Mess with
Texas campaign.
This is an ad that ran in 1986 during something called the Cotton Bowl.
Something called the Cotton Bowl.
Some sort of sporting event.
I love that you'll talk to any expert about the details
of behavioral economics,
but you will not Google the content.
No, no, no.
You see those words and you're like, no.
This is not a coincidence, Peter.
I refuse to learn anything about sports.
This is a choice.
This is my choice, architecture.
All right.
This is Stevie Ray von. Each year we spend over 20 million dollars picking up trash along our Texas highways.
Messin' with Texas isn't just an insult to the Lone Star State.
It's a crime. What? Don't mess with Texas.
Do you feel threatened?
Do you feel like you're never gonna litter again?
It's actually, I guess, they're trying to associate
not littering with somehow being tough.
Yes. This is the same basic play
as just having the commercial be,
like flaming gay guys who are littering.
And it's the 1980s and you're watching it and home
and you're like, what the fuck?
No.
That would have gotten me to watch sports.
Littering is gay.
That is the message that they are trying to send to this.
Yeah.
But then, I mean, they're actually trying to send something very specific, which the book
does not acknowledge.
So I'm also now going to send you a photograph of the roadside signs that accompanied this
massive, like, years-long public information campaign.
Okay.
It says, don't mess with Texas, and then in slightly slightly smaller font up to $2,000 fine for
littering.
And in this PSA, Stevie Rayvon says, it's not just bad to litter, it's a crime.
In Nudge, they say, all this happened not through mandates, threats or coercion, but
through a creative Nudge.
Well, the Nudge was telling people about the coercion, but through a creative nudge. Well, the nudge was telling people about the coercion.
This is illegal behavior and you pay money if you get caught doing it.
The signs didn't just say don't mess with Texas because no one would know that that was
a fucking anti-liring campaign.
Right.
It appears that perhaps the threat of a massive fine.
Yeah.
That works.
I can see that working.
This is the other hiding of the ball that they're doing.
So the first clue that they're doing a little bit of skipping over important context
is that they say in its first six years there was a 72% reduction in visible roadside
litter.
If people stop littering tomorrow, that does not reduce the existing roadside litter.
Right.
So when you start looking into this,
it turns out that Texas was the first state
to have an adopt a highway program.
This is something where the high school football team
or the local else club adopts a mile of highway,
some stretch of highway, and four times a year,
volunteers, hundreds of volunteers, go out and clean up litter.
This is something that Texas basically came up with, that people will do this as a form
of civic pride.
Because they're just privatizing government services in creative ways, right?
Exactly.
Well, what if we inspired people to take care of a highway?
Right.
And also it's also free advertising because you get to put up a sign that says, like,
this stretch of highway cleaned up by like the get to put up a sign. Right. It says like this stretch of highway
cleaned up by like the local Arbis or whatever.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Whatever you think about this,
it's like a fairly innovative program
that Texas came up with.
And they did all kinds of public events.
In 1987, they had something called the Great Texas Trash Off
where they get volunteers across the state
to pick up roadside trash.
The weird thing about the way that they present this
in the nudge book is that there is actually
an element of social behavior here.
I spent like two days reading about littering
because I think it's like genuinely fascinating behavior.
When there is less trash on the road,
people don't fucking litter.
Right.
Because they think nobody else is littering.
So basically in Texas, it became this like rolling snowball
where it's like once you get the trash off the road,
people are like, oh, they don't think about littering,
whereas if you're driving around
this fast food wrappers everywhere,
you're like, oh, fuck it, I can just throw mine
out the window too.
Yeah, right.
So it did actually play on social conformity.
And one of the most effective anti littering interventions
is actually adding trash cans.
This doesn't really work on road sides, but in cities, when you want to get rid of littering interventions is actually adding trash cans. This doesn't really work on road sides,
but in cities, when you want to get rid of littering,
that's actually like a pretty fucking smart nudge.
Like if you look around and there's a trash can
five feet away, you'll throw away your cigarette pack.
If there's no trash can within sight,
you're like, oh, fuck it, you throw it on the ground.
Well, is it like everything sort of a nudge?
Like I keep, because I'm trying to like think
of creative solutions to these types of problems.
All of them, you're trying to solve a problem
of human behavior.
So like nearly every solution becomes a nudge, right?
This is just like a word that you can throw on
to almost anything and be like, see, nudge, nudge theory.
Peter, I have led you to the river.
We were saying exactly the thing that we were going to reach with this section.
None of these examples are fucking nudges.
Okay.
The grad student who wrote checks for a hundred bucks if he didn't turn in his thesis, that's
just a fine.
He had to pay a hundred dollars for not finishing his thesis.
A fine is just a way of banning something, right, which they expressly said was not a nudge.
Exactly.
This is just like a normal thing that governments do.
Like when they give you a fine for illegal parking,
they're not like nudging you to park better.
And then the Minnesota tax example
is like even more baffling to me.
Because first of all, sending people reminders
to do something doesn't affect their choice architecture, right?
The whether or not you pay your taxes,
nothing about that has changed,
the forms have not changed, all they've done is like,
don't forget to do that, right?
But then the Minnesota tax people sent four letters, right?
The authors of Nudge explicitly say
that only one of those letters is a Nudge
because telling people that like,
oh, 90% of people paid their taxes,
like uses behavioral economics principles.
But you could easily cast those ineffective letters
as nudges, right?
So the one that says, like, oh, pay your taxes
because it goes to like schools and libraries,
that's framing, that's framing paying your taxes
as a form of altruism, right?
And then the other two letters,
where they're like, pay your taxes or we'll bust you,
and pay your taxes and we'll help you,
those are basically testing loss of version.
It's hard not to look at the Minnesota tax thing
and be like, oh, they're saying this is the Nudge letter
because it worked.
And the other letters aren't nudges because they didn't work.
Like it's totally arbitrary what they are
and are not calling a Nudge here.
So you can either broaden the concept out such that anything
that impacts human behavior in any way is a Nudge,
or you can keep it narrow and maybe more useful,
but then it only applies to multiple choice check boxes,
which is so limiting that you couldn't possibly build
like a book around it.
Exactly, this is what's so weird about this concept
and which comes up in a lot of the academic reviews of this,
where it's like, no one can really say
what is and is not a nudge.
Like what we're talking about with these don't mess with Texas signs.
They're basically billboards, right? You dry pass a billboard that says don't litter.
Well does that mean that every single public information campaign is a fucking nudge?
Like I dry pass a billboard that says don't smoke it causes cancer?
Right.
The government is constantly like cajoling you into doing better behavior.
And like these are the least effective forms
of government interventions.
Like a billboard that says don't smoke,
it causes cancer.
Does fucking nothing, we've had decades of these,
we know that they don't work.
And what is fucking wild to me is the fact
that these campaigns don't work is part of the premise
of this book, right?
Consider the organ donation example.
The whole fucking thing was about how we've tried cajoling people,
we've tried telling people that they should be organ donors, right?
The only thing that works is changing the default on the form.
That's why we're here. That's the book.
People are not rational actors who you can just tell stuff to
and expect behavior change.
Yeah, it feels like they ran out of examples of choice architecture real quickly.
Right. I mean, it seems to me like what they're trying to go for is a public policy angle,
when like what they really have is information on marketing.
Yeah. Right. They also note in passing that other states
did exactly what Texas did.
So Oklahoma tried and it was don't lay that trash
on Oklahoma.
Good Lord, you've got to be kidding me.
So I actually think that don't mess the Texas
is a fucking great slogan.
And there does appear to be some secret sauce
with this slogan, it's more powerful than other slogans.
Well, it's definitely better than don't lay that crap
on Oklahoma.
What the fuck?
The sum is R.
Don't ramshackle our panhandle.
I don't know what it could have been.
But like ultimately, we're just talking about
marketing messages.
They're talking about like, oh, the don't mess with Texas thing
was aimed at 18 to 34 year old men.
Which is like,
yeah, okay, that's smart, but that's just like smart marketing.
Find a target audience and craft your message toward the target audience.
I mean, they do this with breakfast cereals.
Yeah.
Is this interesting for like designing an anti-smoking campaign?
Sure, but like, that's that real policy change.
You can't really solve big problems with this.
Right.
Not without getting more homophobic. Yeah.
Banting the sports.
Just one really, just a visual of one really limperist
throwing a piece of trash out of a window.
Then you get, don't litter on the screen.
That's a win.
But then this is one of the weirdest things
about this book that I genuinely shocked
that this didn't come up in more of the reviews
that were published when it came out,
is that the vast majority of examples in this book
are not fucking nudges.
A huge portion of this book is just them
describing public information campaigns.
They're like an anti-smoking campaign in Montana
told teens like most teens don't smoke.
Okay, but that's not meaningfully a nudge,
and there's been public information campaigns
about smoking for decades.
They have other things about like sending like text
reminders to people to like get vaccinated,
which like, it's a nudge in the sense that like,
you're nudging me to remember something.
It's like the literal definition of a nudge,
but it's not like a policy of a nudge.
Right.
They talk about daylight savings time being a nudge.
How's that a nudge?
They change the time.
They say, the simple change of the labels
on the hours of the day, calling six o'clock
by the name seven o'clock, nudges us all into waking up.
Oh, shut the fuck up.
Shut the fuck up.
Oh, when you think about it, time isn't even real.
Oh, I just got nudged into May by the calendar.
There's also a ton of examples in this book
that are just like huge policies.
So they have a section toward the end
where they talk about this pilot program
in North Carolina that paid teenage girls
a dollar a day not to get pregnant.
It says,
Greensboro, North Carolina has experimented with a dollar
and a day program by which teenage girls with a baby
receive a dollar for each day in which they are not pregnant.
Thus far, the results have been extremely promising.
A dollar a day is a trivial cost to the city,
so the plan's total cost is extremely low.
But the small recurring payment is salient
enough to encourage teenage mothers to take steps to avoid getting pregnant again. So this
is actually a sort of pilot program that targets teenagers that have already had a baby
because 30% of teenagers who have kids end up having a second kid within two years.
But then a fucking course, you go to the actual,
quote unquote, study.
It's not meaningfully a study.
There's no control group.
It's basically just like an anecdote.
And it's not that they're paying teenage girls
is that they have a peer support group every like Monday
that they have to attend.
And they get an actual envelope with $71 bills in it
when they attend.
It's basically a conditional welfare program.
Right.
You're paying people if they meet certain criteria.
This is the same thing.
It's like you get food stamps if you apply for four jobs a week.
Right.
This is just a fucking welfare program.
And of course, if you look at actual studies of this,
of which there have been a decent number,
they don't fucking work.
$7 isn't not fucking much. If I had to guess as to whether a dollar was enough money to make
a teenager not want to have sex, let's try five books a day, you know, it's something else.
So that's the social part of the book. We now get to the money part of the book. Obviously,
they have a whole section about like how we're weird
about money. Remember this book is written in 2007 and 2008. So there are some events which have
not occurred in America. To Nudge Lehman Brothers out of bankruptcy. Exactly. Just a couple nudges.
So this is from a chapter of the book about like nudges for the financial system.
They have now published a book called Nudge, the final edition in 2020.
So they add a bunch of stuff about COVID, they updated the original text like quite significantly.
As you can imagine, this text is not in the updated version.
This comes after a section where they talk about how complicated mortgages have become and how these complications end up harming like the poorest version. Yeah, okay. This comes after a section where they talk about how complicated mortgages have become
and how these complications end up harming like the poorest people.
Okay.
These factors are exacerbated in the segment of the market that caters to the poorest and
highest risk borrowers, the so-called subprime market.
As is often the case, there are two extreme views about subprime loans.
Some, particularly those left of center
or in the news media, label all such loans with the derogatory term predatory. This broad
brush fails to recognize the obvious fact that higher risk loans will have to have higher
interest rates to compensate the people who lend the money.
Subprime loans also give people a valuable second chance.
Subprime lenders provide funding for any large purchase.
More often than not, these purchases help people achieve an American dream, better home ownership.
See, Subprime people are out here smearing Subprime loans.
I love that this behavioral economics pitch
is like everything you knew about
the rational actor in economics is wrong.
But then when it comes down to it,
they still are just like on the side of giant banks
and their predatory loans, right?
Like nothing fundamentally changes
in the way they view the world.
Right.
You're getting to the conclusion of this little section, right?
So they're fixed for this.
They're like, well, some people want to ban these kinds of loans
and that wouldn't work.
That's not libertarian paternalism.
They do this a lot, but they're like,
that's not even a nudge.
I like how we immediately get to all policy solutions
must be nudges, right?
Exactly.
So it was not a nudge.
Any intervention that's not just a little tiki-tack fucking thing is like automatically
suspect, right? Like, ooh, that's a lot. That's a lot of government intervention.
The way they want to solve subprime mortgages, because obviously you don't want to ban
them, because like they're good as we all know in 2023. Of course. Of course.
Their proposal is that banks would have to provide more information.
So you have to give them a report that gives them all of the terms in plain language, right?
So they say, lenders would have to provide a machine readable detailed report that incorporates
all the fees and interest rate provisions. This information would allow independent third
parties to offer much better advice. Our strong hunch is that if this data were made available, third party services would emerge
to compare lenders.
Care would need to be taken that the system did not foster collusion, but we think this
would be easy enough to monitor and prevent.
This data would also make it much easier to shop for mortgages online, which would make
the mortgage market more competitive.
So this is just a part of this behavior
or economics book that's about how to make
predatory subprime loans work for everyone.
Yeah, exactly.
Because we don't want to deny it to them
because it's a better home ownership, Peter.
This is dark. How did this get so dark so far?
I know right. I thought we were having fun.
I feel like economists have this tick in their brain
where like a lot of people look at various elements and
machinations of the financial system and they're like, wow, that looks predatory and unfair, right?
And economists are like, actually, it's great. Also, it's as you alluded to earlier,
they're describing this as a nudge, but what they're actually talking about is a legal
requirement for companies. It's just a regulation. It's just a banking regulation. It's just a bank reg, right?
Like I don't really understand what,
I mean, you know, we're obviously in a place
where Nudge has lost all meaning,
and that happened right after the...
Texas.
Well, I thought like the Oregon donation
about like the last time I really,
I really understood what Nudge was.
Now it's just, like I feel like nudge is now,
it's colloquial use is what we're doing, right?
We're in like anything that just like,
like as a little push on human behavior is a nudge now.
But then what's so fascinating to me is they,
you know, they have a whole section earlier in the book
about how oftentimes people think that like giving people
more choice is more freedom, right?
If you give, like, you can have like 41 different health care
plans, but that doesn't work because most people just like do
the default and people get overloaded really quickly, right?
You need three.
But then when we get to this section of the book, they're like,
oh, we should give people all these choices so that they can
make the right decision.
Yeah.
But the whole premise of behavioral economics is that people
fucking hate doing this shit.
We kind of know that the people who are being exploited
by these mortgages are not people who have
like a lot of knowledge or time or interest
in getting into the fucking details.
Imagine mortgages but with more middlemen.
Exactly. That's the pitch.
If you're gonna do a fucking bank regulation
that of course all the banks are gonna hate,
why wouldn't you just do something like forces them to actually offer people something good
or like you can't do predatory shit? No, that's not a nudge. It's not a nudge. Nudge is only from now on.
The whole like the next like three chapters they do the same thing for student loans.
They're like student loans have got another control and their solution of course is to like make
the forms easier and like integrate it with your taxes. That's the problem.
Yeah, what's doing the loans is that the forms
are a little too convoluted.
You can make it easier.
They then have a credit card thing,
credit card spending is out of control.
Also, credit card companies have to issue you
a yearly annual report that is like,
all the fees you paid this year.
I don't want to constantly be drilling down into what the fuck is in Nudge even.
But this is just like a disclosure regulation, which is not a Nudge because what they started off
with was like, all right, we're not penalizing anyone. That's not a Nudge, right? But what a disclosure regulation actually is, is a requirement that in this case the bank
make these disclosures or else they will be penalized. It's experienced as choice architecture
for consumers. But behind it is like a vast bureaucracy of coming up with these laws and then
presumably enforcing these laws
too of disclosure requirements.
It seems like they're trying to include you having
more information about your choices as a nudge.
Sure.
Like it might fit their strict definition,
but it does seem like a very different concept than like
this food is at eye level when you're ordering.
Nudge is in wokeness, two things that people have
strong opinions on, but no one can say what the fuck they are.
It just seems like even if you want to grant
that there is some conceivable utility here,
you're still only talking about like one percent
of what the government even ostensibly does.
And this gets us to, you knew it was coming,
the chapter on climate change. Oh, fuck yeah,
we're going to nudge our way to having ice caps. Yeah, we're closing holes in ozone layers.
All right. So here's their little introduction to this chapter.
Finally, someone proposing small incremental changes to address climate change. It's time to do
the small stuff. Okay. Most of the time, government seeking to protect the environment and to control the
harmful health effects of pollution have gone well beyond a nudge, and their steps have not been
libertarian. Typically, regulators have chosen some kind of command and control regulation by which
they reject free choices and markets
entirely, and allow people little flexibility in promoting environmental goals.
In the United States, national emissions limitations imposed on major pollution sources have been the
rule, not the exception. Such limitations have sometimes been effective, The air is much cleaner than it was in 1970.
Philosophically, however.
The future.
Such limitations look uncomfortably similar
to Soviet style five-year plans
in which bureaucrats in Washington
announced that millions of people
have to change their conduct in the next five years.
Where's the architecture and all this?
Okay, so I love like sure, the air is cleaner,
but fill a soft.
I mean, no, I know, this is my favorite shit.
They're like this thing that isn't a nudge,
work like gangbusters, but what if it was a nudge?
Also, most regulations are not targeted
at causing the common person to change their behavior directly.
Most regulations are just targeted at industry.
That's how environmental regulations work.
We have clean air because of emission standards.
Yeah, because of the Clean Air Act in 1970
and like punishments, criminal punishments
for people who pollute, commanding a troll shit, it whips.
This whole concept is like,
we really want to preserve the illusion of freedom.
The whole choice architecture idea
is built around the premise
that the things that we perceive to be our choices
are not really our choices, right?
We're influenced by all this stuff
that we can't quite detect.
And when you lead with that,
the idea that it's like philosophically,
morally important to preserve your right to choice
is less compelling because you've already admitted
that choice is sort of an illusion in many respects.
Exactly.
You know, we now have a lot of our political discourse now
revolves around like bullshit, consumer consumerist debates like gas stoves
right. These things that no one gave a shit about and you wouldn't even notice in a vacuum become
the locus of these fights about like quote unquote choice. It's all just sort of a proxy fight about
these like abstract cultural values. And this is sort of making the same
error, the idea that our choices about these things are like of the utmost importance and we
must protect like the concept of choice in some way. It seems inherently silly to me and at odds
with their basic thesis. This is like the fundamental contradiction at the heart of this mismatch between the problems
they are trying to solve and the solutions
that they are proposing, right?
So the climate change chapter leads up to this solution.
It says, we can now sketch an initial low cost
nudge for the problem of climate change.
The government should create a greenhouse gas inventory
requiring disclosure by the most significant emitters. The greenhouse gas inventory would
permit people to see the various sources of greenhouse gases in the United States
and to track changes over time. Seeing that list, states and localities could
respond by considering legislative measures. In all likelihood, interested groups,
including members of the media, would draw attention to the largest emitters.
To be sure, an inventory of this kind might not produce massive changes on its own, but such a nudge would not be costly and would almost certainly help.
I went into rich dad voice again.
I'm going to try to orchestrate my thoughts about that.
First of all, not a nudge. It's just a disclosure regulation, right?
It's just a disclosure.
It's just a law for companies, it's not a nudge.
Should go without saying this is an inadequate response
to climate change.
We have a good sense of who, like the polluters are.
We, like, disclosures wouldn't give us
a ton more information than we already have.
But we don't know the specific amount
they're polluting, Peter.
If we knew the specific amounts.
Right, like if I, you think like the average person looking at like, oh my god, like that many
metric tons, like they don't, no one fucking knows what that means. Loss of version, Peter, people
don't want to lose their lungs. So it's actually behavioral. So you, oh man, hold on, always my thought.
I love that you're melting down. Like how shitty this idea is. Even if you orchestrated this,
such that there were disclosure requirements,
and then people are like, okay, Exxon is polluting,
which we only know because of this disclosure requirement.
We learned it.
We are now going to implement regulations.
Whatever regulation they implement
would no longer be a nudge, right?
Because it would have to be a fucking
Em, like a mission cap or something like that. So why do we just fucking regulate them then?
Exactly. All they're doing is saying like if we gave people more information, then maybe
we would implement the policy that we all know we need to implement. Yes. Yes. It says
seeing that list states and localities could respond by considering legislative
measures.
What are the legislative measures?
Is it like to put a cap on how much you're allowed to pollute?
Why don't we just do that federally?
Why would we wait until like West Virginia reads a fucking report?
And it's like, oh, it turns out there's pollution coming from the coal mine.
We're just kicking the fucking can down the road ultimately.
Yeah. pollution coming from the coal mine. We're just kicking the fucking can down the road ultimately.
They start off with this definition of nudge, is something that is about choice architecture.
They move into using it colloquially to mean like a little thing that might impact people's behavior. That sort of reveals the project, which is like, never do a large policy thing.
Right.
So exactly what you are saying leads us back to organ donation.
When I said earlier that the organ donor example is doing a ton of work for this concept
and for this book and is the paradigmatic example of a nudge?
I meant that derogatorily, to review, right?
There's countries that have opt-in systems
where you have to take a box to be an organ donor.
There's countries that have opt-out systems
where you take a box if you don't want to be an organ donor.
And they have very different rates
of the number of people who are organ donors, right?
What they don't have is differences in the number of actual who are organ donors, right? What they don't have is differences
in the number of actual organs that get donated.
Organ donation systems have almost nothing to do
with the percentage of the population
that ticks a box on a fucking form.
So the country with the highest rate of organ donations,
like actual like a functioning system
or organ donations is Spain.
When you look at Spain, what you find is not like one weird trick, right?
You find decades of dedicated reforms.
So, Spain changed from an opt-in to an opt-out system in the late 70s,
but the number of actual donations didn't increase into the late 80s
because there was basically no capacity.
There were only surgeons in Madrid and Barcelona
who could do these transplants, right?
So they had to do a bunch of training
for doctors in regional hospitals.
They created a national registry that had been done
at the regional level before.
They had to centralize everything.
They have this really well integrated into end of life care now.
So if you are diagnosed with a terminal illness,
someone will come and visit you and be like,
hey, you know, have you thought about saving somebody's life after you're gone?
Yeah. Let's do scans to find out what organs are still functioning.
There's dedicated intensive care units.
There's dedicated staff.
And importantly, there's constant surveillance and improvement.
So Spain has gone through like three waves of improvement.
They look at like, okay, what are the existing barriers in the system? How can we get this even higher? You have to look
at a system. You have to dedicate funding to it. You have to take the specifics seriously.
Maybe that's boring or something, but it's like, that's how you solve problems. I'm sorry. It
requires money. It requires expertise. It requires not stripping them of context,
but putting the context back in.
Right.
Right.
I read actually quite a bit about this.
This is super fascinating.
The one of the best articles I read
is called Assessing Global Organization Policies
opt in versus opt out by Harriet Rosanne Etheridge.
So at the end of her article, Harriet notes
that America actually has a really high rate
of people
taking the box to be organ donors.
It's like more than 60%, which is way higher
than other like opt-in countries.
The barriers in America are not related to getting
more people to sign up as organ donors.
This is a healthcare systems project.
There's a whole chain of events
has to take place for organ donations to happen.
And there are problems with the other fucking links in the chain.
Yeah.
And since this fucking book came out, a lot of countries have actually switched from one system
to the other and they have seen no improvements.
This reminds me of the climate example where these guys want to come up with this like
fucking clever, like little fake smart guy solution
to a problem that at bottom needs resources.
The other reason I really wanted to talk about this,
and I don't know if this counts as a twist,
but as I said, they updated Nudge in 2020
with like Nudge the final edition, responding to critiques,
updating the text, right?
And they kept the chapter on organ donation.
But they've now made it this like weird,
scolding chapter about how everybody misread
the book in the first place.
We never said that America should switch
from one system to the other.
And they say that to our dismay,
in the years since, several countries, including
Wales, England, and Germany, have considered or made the switch to presumed consent.
So it's like you, robes, you children, you read our book, and you pass this policy when
we never even said that that's what you should do.
Right.
They were nudging us in that direction to use a colloquial term.
So I am going to read the section of their book where they present the full context.
So to their credit, they did, in fact, mention in the original book that like,
you can't only do the opt-out system, right? They added some coffee out. So this is the full
paragraph where they talk about the caveats, the weaknesses of their plan, right?
Okay. So far, presumed consent looks awfully good,
but we must stress that this approach is hardly a panacea.
A program that successfully gets organs
from deceased donors to needy transplant recipients
requires a complete infrastructure.
Currently, Spain is the world's leader
in developing that infrastructure,
achieving a donation rate of nearly 35 donors
per million people,
compared with a bit more than 20 donors per million
in the United States. The default consent rule, therefore, is not the only thing that matters. Still,
careful statistical analyses find that holding everything else constant, switching from explicit
consent to presumed consent increases the donation rate in a country by roughly 16%. Another analysis
obtains a slightly smaller but similar effect. Whatever the precise figure, it is clear that the switch would save thousands of lives
every year.
So we never said you should make the switch.
We merely said that switching would save thousands of lives.
Right.
This reminds me of, there's a thing on like investing social media where people are like,
buy this pump and dump stock,
and then at the very end of it,
it's like this is not financial advice.
Yeah, don't do this,
I'm very obviously telling you to do it.
I'm telling you that this would rule,
and it is absolutely the best thing to do.
I'm not technically telling you to do it.
This to me is also like the fundamental intellectual
project of the book, right?
Where if updating the organization system requires a complete overhaul, then why is there
a chapter about it in your book about like little technical tweaks?
Why is your book called nudge?
Why is your fucking book called nudge, dude?
This ultimately is an example against your thesis.
The entire selling point of the book is that we can achieve great significant changes.
They say this over and over again. You can achieve big changes without getting bogged down in politics, without
spending a bunch of tax money. And then you look at the specifics and they're like, oh,
yeah, you know, you have to get bogged down in the politics and spend a bunch of money
to do this. Right. Right. The metaphor that I keep coming back to is, remember how serial
ads used to have like part of a complete breakfast?
Uh-huh.
If you do a boat of lucky charms with like a glass of orange juice,
with all of the other nutrients that you actually need.
Right.
If you do it with healthy stuff, then it's healthy.
Right.
Which is true of literally everything.
It's like, oh, well, if you do this with huge structural costly reforms, it'll work.
Yeah.
But like all you're doing ultimately is advocating for broad
structural reforms and super just bread and butter policy
making.
That's utterly banal, but it's like you've reached that
conclusion between the lines of your book explicitly
rejecting and arguing against that approach.
Yeah, there's a problem with these concepts where like,
if you zoom out enough, they're correct, but not very useful. Right. And if you zoom in, you start
seeing that they're not really correct in the micro. They're not explaining a lot.
Right. And I see that here too, where it's like, we have this concept and like, it might
be a useful way to process certain types of things, but it's
really just like a vocabulary.
It's just a way of sort of simplifying how we talk about certain things.
You can't spin that into something that can solve climate change, you know?
Right.
But this also speaks to what I find so frustrating about the quote-unquote debate over the
book when it first came out. But this also speaks to what I find so frustrating about the quote unquote debate over the book
when it first came out.
There's some weird like conservative objections to the book where they're like nudging is
totalitarianism.
I love this because it's such a conservative thing where some technocratic liberal is like,
what if we just did the smallest little intervention and conservatives are like,
you are Joseph Stalin.
Right.
This is why you should just propose
holistic regulations or legislation
or whatever the fuck you can't compromise
with these psychos.
Yeah.
Don't bother with this technocratic bullshit.
But then this is what frustrates me so much
is because this was presented to the public
as a left versus right, nudging versus nudging And this is what frustrates me so much, is because this was presented to the public as
a left versus right, you know, nudging versus nudging as totalitarianism debate, they sort
of missed what I believe to be the much better critique.
I don't have a philosophical problem with nudging, right?
My problem is they don't fucking work.
And they can't solve the problems that we have.
But like that critique of nudging
didn't really appear in anywhere prominent
for another 10 years.
Basically, at this point now,
there's been a number of meta-analyses
of various, there's 51 countries
have these nudging units, right?
And so there's these huge meta-analyses
of all the things that they've tried,
and every single one of them finds tiny effects.
This is from an abstract to one of them.
It says,
Recent studies have found that providing households
with information on their electricity usage
compared to that of other households, a classic nudge,
reduced electricity consumption by 2% or less.
There was a test where they sent text message reminders
to high school students,
reminding them to apply for colleges,
68% of kids who got nudges applied for college
and 65% of kids who didn't get nudges applied for college.
I've impressed that it's 3%.
I'm sorry, but to be like, oh shit, right.
I got the apply for college text.
And then it's fascinating to me that they start the book
with this thing of cafeteria nudges
and where you place food
and it can have an effect of up to 25%.
No, dude. There's been a million of these fucking cafeteria nudges.
Some of them do actually affect kids' behavior, but they affect the behavior of
taking fruit and vegetables, not eating fruit and vegetables.
Right. That's the hard part is getting kids to actually consume this stuff.
And once you boil it down to what the kids are consuming,
it's like 0.1 of a unit more.
It's like a little slice of Apple extra.
This is why this is so useful in like a marketing framework.
And so use lists in a governing framework because when you're doing marketing
shit, getting two or three percent or more purchases is massive.
You're driving revenue, but that's because you can't mandate behavior when you're selling
someone something, right?
When you're the government, you can just tell polluters to stop polluting.
You can make it a crime.
You have all kinds of tools at your disposal.
You are not limited to marketing gimmicks.
Right, exactly.
You could just take like the chocolate milk out of schools.
Milk cookies, bang.
Yeah, there's also a huge problem of inconsistent effect.
So a huge percentage of these nudge projects don't replicate.
We've now had like 15 years of studies on these.
And like at best, they have like a 5% effect.
And most of them are short term, right?
Like the, there's no data on this because the original fly
and the urinal study is basically fake.
But the flies and the urinals after a while,
you just get used to them and you don't notice them anymore.
I'm gonna go back to my 360 being strategy.
The centrifugal person ining strategy. Yes.
I guess that there's like a, if you reduced the scale of the problems that the book implies,
it might be able to solve, then you can sort of view it as like, here's a low-cost intervention
Here's a low cost intervention that will produce small, but possibly meaningful results in certain situations, right?
But when you pitch it as like, all right, check out my climate change solution.
What if you gave people a little bit of information and then maybe hopefully they'll do something
with it.
All of a sudden, you show how insufficient this framework is for dealing with the problems
that we actually want to solve.
Maybe this concept is part of an architecture of solutions in how to make kids eat slightly
healthier or whatever, right? But it can't be like the thing that Barack Obama is using as his guiding light for eight
years of being the president of the United States.
This is basically where we're going to stop for this episode.
Next episode, Peter, we have not gotten to like the bad parts of the book yet.
Hell yeah.
I don't know.
I don't know.
They're really shitty parts. They get, they try yeah. I don't know. I don't know. I don't know.
I don't know.
They're really shitty parts.
They get, they try to solve other problems.
Okay.
I'm going to end with like a teaser quote.
We have to put ourselves, put yourself back in like 2007, 2008, and then set Peter.
I'm very dumb.
My hair looks like shit.
Okay.
It says, we recognize that many people, including members of many religious groups, strongly
object to same-sex marriage.
Religious organizations insist on their right to decide for themselves,
which unions they are willing to recognize, with attention to gender, religion, age, and other factors.
We also know that many members of same-sex couples want to make lasting commitments to another.
To respect the liberty of religious groups while protecting individual freedom in general,
we propose that marriage
as such should be completely privatized.
Yeah, sure.
So whatever.
Next time, we're going to talk about the bad stuff.
I'm going to be irritated thinking about that.
God, fucking gay marriage discourse.
It was such a bummer for someone.
Oh my God, Jesus Christ.
It's harkening to the same problem.
Like as soon as you identify a problem where there is political will on both sides,
this is useless.
You can't nudge.
You can't trick people into going against what they believe to be their core religious beliefs.
Our strategy for nudgingate people back into the closet. you