Traditional economic models often assume citizens act only based on personal gain. Under such models, values remain fixed and rules only change costs or rewards. Researchers challenge that idea, showing values change in response to policy design.

Environmental values already exist among many citizens. Personal motivation drives choices such as cycling, reducing heating, or avoiding unnecessary travel.

Poorly designed mandates can weaken such motivation. Psychology and economics describe such change as “crowding out.” External control reduces internal motivation.

  • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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    6 days ago

    The title says mandatory, but the body says poorly designed.

    Indeed, the article goes on to state

    Not all mandates cause equal resistance. Research shows beliefs about effectiveness play a key role.

    When people believe a policy truly reduces emissions, opposition drops. Agreement increases when rules feel meaningful instead of symbolic.