This paper investigates households' willingness to pay for sustainable investments using evidence from a pilot lab-in-the-field experiment run in different branches of a large Italian bank. The analysis reveals three main results. First, the willingness to pay is lower for graduated individuals, higher for those with a medium investment horizon, for those engaged in volunteering and for those concerned about climate change. Second, the exposure to a negative (vs. positive) visual treatment, causes an average increase in the willingness to pay for Environmental, Social, and Governance assets, albeit this effect vanishes once controls are added. Third, when dissecting results by the factor of interest, the negative visual treatment significantly increases the willingness to pay among the investors interested in the Environmental dimension only. This suggests that, with suitable leverage, the demand and willingness to pay for all sustainability dimensions can be nudged, with important industry and policy implications.

Bertelli, B., Brunetti, M., Torricelli, C., Zoli, M. (2026). Nudging households' sustainable investments: results from a pilot lab-in-the-field experiment in two Italian cities. SOCIO-ECONOMIC PLANNING SCIENCES, 104 [10.1016/j.seps.2025.102405].

Nudging households' sustainable investments: results from a pilot lab-in-the-field experiment in two Italian cities

Marianna Brunetti;Mariangela Zoli
2026-01-01

Abstract

This paper investigates households' willingness to pay for sustainable investments using evidence from a pilot lab-in-the-field experiment run in different branches of a large Italian bank. The analysis reveals three main results. First, the willingness to pay is lower for graduated individuals, higher for those with a medium investment horizon, for those engaged in volunteering and for those concerned about climate change. Second, the exposure to a negative (vs. positive) visual treatment, causes an average increase in the willingness to pay for Environmental, Social, and Governance assets, albeit this effect vanishes once controls are added. Third, when dissecting results by the factor of interest, the negative visual treatment significantly increases the willingness to pay among the investors interested in the Environmental dimension only. This suggests that, with suitable leverage, the demand and willingness to pay for all sustainability dimensions can be nudged, with important industry and policy implications.
2026
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore ECON-02/A - Politica economica
Settore STAT-02/A - Statistica economica
Settore ECON-01/A - Economia politica
English
Household financial choices
Lab-in-the field experiment
Sustainable finance
Visual nudges
Willingness to pay
Bertelli, B., Brunetti, M., Torricelli, C., Zoli, M. (2026). Nudging households' sustainable investments: results from a pilot lab-in-the-field experiment in two Italian cities. SOCIO-ECONOMIC PLANNING SCIENCES, 104 [10.1016/j.seps.2025.102405].
Bertelli, B; Brunetti, M; Torricelli, C; Zoli, M
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/446429
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