ABSTRACT

When it was published in 2008, Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein’s Nudge: Improving Decisions about Health, Wealth, and Happiness quickly became one of the most influential books in modern economics and politics. Within a short time, it had inspired whole government departments in the US and UK, and others as far afield as Singapore. One of the keys to Nudge’s success is Thaler and Sunstein’s ability to create a detailed and persuasive case for their take on economic decision-making. Nudge is not a book packed with original findings or data; instead it is a careful and systematic synthesis of decades of research into behavioral economics. The discipline challenges much conventional economic thought – which works on the basis that, overall, humans make rational decisions – by focusing instead on the ‘irrational’ cognitive biases that affect our decision making. These seemingly in-built biases mean that certain kinds of economic decision-making are predictably irrational. Thaler and Sunstein prove themselves experts at creating persuasive arguments and dealing effectively with counter-arguments. They conclude that if governments understand these cognitive biases, they can ‘nudge’ us into making better decisions for ourselves. Entertaining as well as smart, Nudge shows the full range of reasoning skills that go into making a persuasive argument.

section 1|19 pages

Influences

chapter |4 pages

Module 2 Academic Context

chapter |5 pages

Module 3 The Problem

chapter |4 pages

Module 4 The Authors’ Contribution

section 2|20 pages

Ideas

chapter |5 pages

Module 5 Main Ideas

chapter |5 pages

Module 6 Secondary Ideas

chapter |5 pages

Module 7 Achievement

chapter |4 pages

Module 8 Place in the Authors’ Work

section 3|19 pages

Impact

chapter |4 pages

Module 9 The First Responses

chapter |5 pages

Module 10 The Evolving Debate

chapter |5 pages

Module 11 Impact and Influence Today

chapter |4 pages

Module 12 Where Next?