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Reverse labeling: Does framing labels as losses promote more ethical, more eco-friendly, and healthier choices?

Aandahl, Emilie; Py, Zoe Alicia Stensland Py
Master thesis
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https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2981690
Utgivelsesdato
2021
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  • Master Thesis [4656]
Sammendrag
The purpose of this thesis is to investigate the effects of replacing standard labels (labels

framed as gains) with reverse labels (labels framed as losses) on making more ethical, more

eco-friendly, and healthier consumer choices. Previous literature suggests that standard

labels improve both the producer and consumer surplus. However, based on the concepts

of loss aversion and contextual inference, we predicted that reverse labels increase the

fraction of people that make more sustainable choices.

To test this prediction, we conducted a choice experiment randomly assigning respondents

to a control group exposed to standard labels or to a treatment group exposed to reverse

labels. Using OLS estimation, our analysis concluded that the students exposed to reverse

labeling had a higher probability of 32.8 percentage points of selecting the more ethical

option and 19.6 percentage points of selecting the more eco-friendly option than the

students exposed to standard labeling. Further, the ones without strong opinions towards

sustainability were most influenced by reverse labeling. When exposed to reverse labeling,

they were on average 25 percentage points more likely to choose the sustainable option

than those who consider sustainability important to them. Interestingly, reverse labeling

did not have a differential impact on how the products were perceived in terms of quality

or sustainability. Therefore, the findings suggest that loss aversion may be the primary

driver of the change in decisions: people use the unlabeled product as the reference point

and are less willing to gain an attribute than lose the same attribute. The current findings

imply that there could be substantial gains from reversing the process of sustainable

labeling. However, further research on a more representative consumer sample is needed

prior to enforcing a new policy.

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