Nudging, Fast and Slow: Experimental Evidence from Food Choices Under Time Pressure

38 Pages Posted: 3 Dec 2024 Last revised: 21 Feb 2025

See all articles by Paul M. Lohmann

Paul M. Lohmann

Cambridge Judge Business School, El-Erian Institute

Elisabeth Gsottbauer

Institute of Public Finance, Department of Economics and Statistics, University of Innsbruck

Christina Annette Gravert

University of Copenhagen

Lucia A. Reisch

El-Erian Institute for Behavioural Economics and Policy; Copenhagen Business School - Department of Management, Society and Communication

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: November 06, 2024

Abstract

Understanding when and why nudges work is crucial for designing interventions that consistently and reliably change behaviour. This paper explores the relationship between decision-making speed and the effectiveness of two nudges – carbon footprint labelling and menu repositioning – aimed at encouraging climate-friendly food choices. Using an incentivized online randomized controlled trial with a quasi-representative sample of British consumers (N=3,052) ordering meals through an experimental food-delivery platform, we introduced a time-pressure mechanism to capture both fast and slow decision-making processes. Our findings suggest that menu repositioning is an effective tool for promoting climate-friendly choices when decisions are made quickly, though the effect fades when subjects have time to revise their choices. Carbon labels, in contrast, showed minimal impact overall but reduced emissions among highly educated and climate-conscious individuals when they made fast decisions. The results imply that choice architects should apply both interventions in contexts where consumers make fast decisions, such as digital platforms, canteens, or fast-food restaurants to help mitigate climate externalities. More broadly, our findings suggest that the available decision time in different contexts might at least partly explain differences in effect sizes found in previous studies of these nudges.

Keywords: carbon-footprint labelling, choice architecture, food-delivery apps, low-carbon diets, dual-process models

JEL Classification: C90, D04, I18, D90, Q18, Q50

Suggested Citation

Lohmann, Paul and Gsottbauer, Elisabeth and Gravert, Christina Annette and Reisch, Lucia A., Nudging, Fast and Slow: Experimental Evidence from Food Choices Under Time Pressure (November 06, 2024). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=5040723 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.5040723

Paul Lohmann (Contact Author)

Cambridge Judge Business School, El-Erian Institute ( email )

Trumpington Rd 25
Cambridge
Great Britain

Elisabeth Gsottbauer

Institute of Public Finance, Department of Economics and Statistics, University of Innsbruck ( email )

Universitätsstrasse 15
Innsbruck, 6020
Austria

Christina Annette Gravert

University of Copenhagen ( email )

Nørregade 10
Copenhagen, DK-1165
Denmark

Lucia A. Reisch

El-Erian Institute for Behavioural Economics and Policy ( email )

Trumpington Rd 25
Cambridge
Great Britain

Copenhagen Business School - Department of Management, Society and Communication ( email )

Solbjerg Plads 3
Frederiksberg C, DK - 2000
Denmark

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