Decision-making within the Household: The Role of Autonomy and Differences in Preferences
Abstract
We use a field experiment to identify how differences in preferences and autonomy in decision-making result in sub-optimal adoption of technologies that can maximize the welfare of all members of the household. We create income-earning opportunities and elicit willingness- to-pay (WTP) for energy-efficient cookstoves through a real stove purchase experiment with randomly chosen wives, husbands and couples. Experimental results suggest that women, who often are responsible for cooking and for collecting fuelwood, reveal a higher preference than men for the improved stoves. Using an instrumental variables tobit estimator, we show that women who have higher decision-making autonomy reveal higher WTP than those who have lower decision-making autonomy. A follow-up survey conducted 15 months after the stove purchase show that autonomy does not affect stove use. Our findings highlight the importance of considering division of labor, different preferences, and bargaining power differences within the household when promoting adoption of new household technologies.
Other description
JEL: C93, D13, O12, Q56
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2018-03Author
Alem, Yonas
Hassen, Sied
Köhlin, Gunnar
Keywords
Preference
Difference
Decision-making
Autonomy
Willingness-to-pay
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
724
Language
eng