Nudging people off of the couch. A nudge experiment on physical exercise in collaboration with SATS.
Abstract
In this paper we demonstrate that it is possible to increase average weekly
exercise frequency by up to 9.45%, by sending the study participants e-mails.
Several of the leading causes of death globally are closely linked to physical
inactivity. In fact, more people die from coronary heart disease than from
starvation every year. Exercise can mitigate the risks of these diseases and increase
general health. We consider exercise as an intertemporal choice in the
context of the Hyperbolic discounting model. To increase exercise frequency
we perform a natural field experiment with the Nordic gym chain SATS, where
we send three different types of e-mails to three randomized treatment groups
over nine weeks. We then compare the treatments to a randomized control
group with a difference-in-differences approach. The results show a difference
in magnitudes in coefficients for the three different treatments, indicating that
the textual contents of the e-mails matter for treatment outcome. This thesis
contributes to the body of literature by including very large sample sizes
compared to previous studies within the field, and furthermore, by having a
completely randomized sample and not having any self selection into the study.
Degree
Master 2-years
Other description
MSc in Economics
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2017-07-28Author
Goffe, Anton
Sundsmyr, Staffan
Series/Report no.
Master Degree Project
2017:97
Language
eng