Do They Do As They Say?
Use of conditional cash transfers has become widespread in development policy given their success in boosting health and education outcomes. Recently, conditional cash transfers are being used to promote pro-environmental behavior. While many of these Payments for Environment Services (PES) programs...
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext bestellen |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | Use of conditional cash transfers has
become widespread in development policy given their success
in boosting health and education outcomes. Recently,
conditional cash transfers are being used to promote
pro-environmental behavior. While many of these Payments for
Environment Services (PES) programs have been successful, it
has been hypothesized that those with less favorable
outcomes have been subject to low additionality, whereby
landholders already conserving their land self-select into
the program. Insights from the behavioral economics
literature suggest that an external incentive, such as PES,
has the potential to crowd in or crowd out individual
behavior differentially across the initial distribution of
intrinsic motivations (Frey, 1992). Thus, to increase the
impact of PES, program administrators might gain from a
better understanding of both the pre-existing motivations
and existing baseline conservation behavior of potential
participants. This paper contributes to the literature by
disentangling and measuring intrinsic motivations,
specifically: Pro-Environment, Pro-Social, Pro-Government,
and Social Norms. Controlling for observable opportunity
costs, we use these latent motivations to analyze behavioral
determinants of take up for a conservation program in São
Paulo, Brazil. The payments are an incentive to comply with
the Brazil Forest Code. We find that Pro-Social and
Pro-Environment landholders are both more likely to be
conserving private land not under legal protection before
the program is introduced, whereas only Pro-Social
landholders are already conserving land under legal
protection. With respect to enrollment in the PES program,
we find Pro-Social landholders are less likely to enroll
while Pro-Environment landholders are more likely to enroll.
Thus we expect some level of additionality from the PES
program. We discuss these findings in light of the
theoretical framework on Self-Determination Theory (SDT). |
---|