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Developing consumption feedback principles for monthly utility bills informed by behavioural economics: evidence from controlled experiments

Better feedback principles for the utility bills in South Africa need to be developed. Utility providers might be able to "nudge" consumers towards more desirable consumption patterns by delivering simpler and better feedback informed by applied behavioural sciences. Two sets of controlled experimen...

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Main Author: Brühl, Johanna Maria
Other Authors: Visser, Martine
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Economics 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Brühl, Johanna Maria
author2 Visser, Martine
author_browse Brühl, Johanna Maria
Visser, Martine
author_facet Visser, Martine
Brühl, Johanna Maria
author_sort Brühl, Johanna Maria
collection Thesis
description Better feedback principles for the utility bills in South Africa need to be developed. Utility providers might be able to "nudge" consumers towards more desirable consumption patterns by delivering simpler and better feedback informed by applied behavioural sciences. Two sets of controlled experiments were conducted with over 1,500 subjects to identify bill design strategies that could overcome two major barriers to effective consumption feedback: • the complexity of the utility bill, especially with regards to tariff calculations, and • consumer's declining mindfulness of utility consumption between billing moments. The "Utility Bill Redesign" experiment, using a randomised control trial, investigates how improving billing feedback design increases consumer's understanding of energy usage and costs. More than 1,300 participants are randomly assigned to different treatment groups and receive one of nine redesigned utility bills or the current standard bill. Thereafter, participant's understanding of the bill they received is tested through a questionnaire. We find that restructuring the bill in a logical order and displaying the amount of electricity consumed in each tariff block with separate bar graphs is a successful way to increase consumer understanding of the bill, especially with regards to the step tariff. Further, the results clearly show that consumers are unable to make sense of a utility bill that is not in their home language, even when adding utility specific symbols. We conclude that significant low-cost improvements can be made to utility bills to increase consumer comprehension. In the "Attention Redirection" experiment, participants are assigned to different treatment groups and are given an online task that requires daily attention and effort in order to maximise pay-offs. We find that daily SMS reminders significantly redirect attention to the daily task. A blank graph, given to participants at the beginning of the experiment to assist them in self-managing their behaviour, has no effect on task adherence. The results illustrate how inattention routinely leads to sub-optimal behaviour in a specific task area and the resulting welfare loss. A purely bill-based strategy is rendered unsuccessful.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:05.102Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
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publisher School of Economics
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/25060 Developing consumption feedback principles for monthly utility bills informed by behavioural economics: evidence from controlled experiments Brühl, Johanna Maria Visser, Martine Applied Economics Better feedback principles for the utility bills in South Africa need to be developed. Utility providers might be able to "nudge" consumers towards more desirable consumption patterns by delivering simpler and better feedback informed by applied behavioural sciences. Two sets of controlled experiments were conducted with over 1,500 subjects to identify bill design strategies that could overcome two major barriers to effective consumption feedback: • the complexity of the utility bill, especially with regards to tariff calculations, and • consumer's declining mindfulness of utility consumption between billing moments. The "Utility Bill Redesign" experiment, using a randomised control trial, investigates how improving billing feedback design increases consumer's understanding of energy usage and costs. More than 1,300 participants are randomly assigned to different treatment groups and receive one of nine redesigned utility bills or the current standard bill. Thereafter, participant's understanding of the bill they received is tested through a questionnaire. We find that restructuring the bill in a logical order and displaying the amount of electricity consumed in each tariff block with separate bar graphs is a successful way to increase consumer understanding of the bill, especially with regards to the step tariff. Further, the results clearly show that consumers are unable to make sense of a utility bill that is not in their home language, even when adding utility specific symbols. We conclude that significant low-cost improvements can be made to utility bills to increase consumer comprehension. In the "Attention Redirection" experiment, participants are assigned to different treatment groups and are given an online task that requires daily attention and effort in order to maximise pay-offs. We find that daily SMS reminders significantly redirect attention to the daily task. A blank graph, given to participants at the beginning of the experiment to assist them in self-managing their behaviour, has no effect on task adherence. The results illustrate how inattention routinely leads to sub-optimal behaviour in a specific task area and the resulting welfare loss. A purely bill-based strategy is rendered unsuccessful. 2017-09-06T07:05:02Z 2017-09-06T07:05:02Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25060 eng application/pdf School of Economics Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Applied Economics
Brühl, Johanna Maria
Developing consumption feedback principles for monthly utility bills informed by behavioural economics: evidence from controlled experiments
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Developing consumption feedback principles for monthly utility bills informed by behavioural economics: evidence from controlled experiments
title_full Developing consumption feedback principles for monthly utility bills informed by behavioural economics: evidence from controlled experiments
title_fullStr Developing consumption feedback principles for monthly utility bills informed by behavioural economics: evidence from controlled experiments
title_full_unstemmed Developing consumption feedback principles for monthly utility bills informed by behavioural economics: evidence from controlled experiments
title_short Developing consumption feedback principles for monthly utility bills informed by behavioural economics: evidence from controlled experiments
title_sort developing consumption feedback principles for monthly utility bills informed by behavioural economics evidence from controlled experiments
topic Applied Economics
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25060
work_keys_str_mv AT bruhljohannamaria developingconsumptionfeedbackprinciplesformonthlyutilitybillsinformedbybehaviouraleconomicsevidencefromcontrolledexperiments