Persuasion: A Case Study of Papal Influences on Fertility- Related Beliefs and Behavior
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Bassi, Vittorio; Rasul, Imran
署名单位:
University of Southern California; University of London; University College London; University of London; London School Economics & Political Science
刊物名称:
AMERICAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL-APPLIED ECONOMICS
ISSN/ISSBN:
1945-7782
DOI:
10.1257/app.20150540
发表日期:
2017
页码:
250-302
关键词:
Television
mortality
inference
SALIENCE
infant
models
CHOICE
IMPACT
time
摘要:
We study the persuasive impacts of non-informative communication on the short-run beliefs and long-run behavior of individuals. We do so in the context of the Papal visit to Brazil in October 1991, in which persuasive messages related to fertility were salient in Papal speeches during the visit. We use individual's exposure to such messages to measure how persuasion shifts short-run beliefs such as intentions to contracept and long-term fertility outcomes such as the timing and total number of births. To measure the short-run causal impact of persuasion, we exploit the fact the Brazil 1991 DHS was fielded in the weeks before, during, and after the Papal visit. We use this fortuitous timing to identify that persuasion significantly reduced individual intentions to contracept by more than 40 percent relative to pre-visit levels, and increased the frequency of unprotected sex by 30 percent. We measure the long-run causal impacts of persuasion on fertility outcomes using later DHS surveys to conduct an event study analysis on births in a five-year window on either side of the 1991 Papal visit. Estimating a hazard model of fertility, we find a significant change in births 9 months post-visit, corresponding to a 1.6 percent increase in the aggregate birth cohort. Our final set of results examine the very long-run impact of persuasion and document the impacts to be on the timing of births rather than on total fertility.
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