Assumptions about behaviour influence the policy preferences of public officials
Authors
Publication date
15 October 2025
Publisher
'Informa UK Limited'
Abstract
Public officials often aim to change people’s behaviour to achieve policy goals. Policy design and behavioural perspectives suggest that individual factors such as officials’ assumptions about behaviour — or implicit theories — can influence officials’ policy choices. This pre-registered survey study examines how assumptions about cooperation, behavioural malleability, and self-control influence policy preferences among 1,015 public officials in the Netherlands. Results show that officials who believe in high levels of cooperative behaviour and behavioural malleability support more government intervention, while assumptions about self-control have no significant effect. Additionally, a quasi-experiment with an information-based intervention led officials to update their assumptions towards greater accuracy
Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.