The Responsibilty Deal Paul Lincoln. The Responsibility Deal Five networks - alcohol, food,...

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Transcript of The Responsibilty Deal Paul Lincoln. The Responsibility Deal Five networks - alcohol, food,...

The Responsibilty Deal

Paul Lincoln

The Responsibility Deal

• Five networks - alcohol, food, activity, workplace, behaviour change.

• Mechanism for dialogue

• Voluntary action

• Industry pledges to action

• Monitoring and evaluation

• Limited resources

Pledges

• Legally obliged and commitments already in the public domain

• Key issue – access and availability not yet addressed

• Early days?

• Unit labelling

• Promotions outside schools

• Retail principles

Key Issues• Civil Society role

• How far and how fast

• Whole sector coverage?

• Focus on behaviour change- behavioural science and economics etc

• Choice architecture and ideology and evidence base

• Ideological and vested interests limiting factor

• Success or failure is a result!

Nuffield Ladder

Behavioural economics has been studied for 40 years

‘It turns out that the environmental effects on behavior are a lot stronger than most people expect’

Daniel Kahneman, Nobel Laureate

Key insight: you can change behaviour without changing minds...

MINDSPACE

Messenger we are heavily influenced by who communicates information

Incentives our responses to incentives are shaped by predictable mental shortcuts such as strongly avoiding losses

Norms we are strongly influenced by what others do

Defaults we ‘go with the flow’ of pre-set options

Salience our attention is drawn to what is novel and seems relevant to us

Priming our acts are often influenced by sub-conscious cues

Affect our emotional associations can powerfully shape our actions

Commitments we seek to be consistent with our public promises, and reciprocate acts

Ego we act in ways that make us feel better about ourselves

Behaviour Change

• Reflective system

• Automatic system

• Modern marketing –re-engineering commercial nudges

• Environment, environment and environment

Drawing attention to the stairs – the ‘fun theory’

Partnerships

The hazards associated with upstream measures

Health Protection Measures

The end!

Incentives

Our responses to incentives are shaped by predictable mental shortcuts such as strongly avoiding losses

• Losses loom larger than gains

• We overweight small probabilities

• We mentally allocate money to discrete bundles

• We live today at the expense of tomorrow

Incentives may ‘crowd out’ intrinsic motivations

Dilemas