Published October 7, 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Monetary incentives increase COVID-19 vaccinations

  • 1. University of Copenhagen
  • 2. University of Lausanne
  • 3. University of Zurich
  • 4. Columbia University
  • 5. University of Chicago
  • 6. Lund University

Description

The stalling of COVID-19 vaccination rates threatens public health. To increase vaccination rates, governments across the world are considering the use of monetary incentives. Here we present evidence about the effect of guaranteed payments on COVID-19 vaccination uptake. We ran a large preregistered randomized controlled trial (with 8286 participants) in Sweden and linked the data to population-wide administrative vaccination records. We found that modest monetary payments of 24 US dollars (200 Swedish kronor) increased vaccination rates by 4.2 percentage points (P = 0.005), from a baseline rate of 71.6%. By contrast, behavioral nudges increased stated intentions to become vaccinated but had only small and not statistically significant impacts on vaccination rates. The results highlight the potential of modest monetary incentives to raise vaccination rates.

Data availability

All data and code used in the analysis can be freely downloaded from Zenodo (35) for the purpose of reproducing the analysis. We preregistered the data collection and analysis at the AEA RCT Registry (36). The Swedish Ethical Review Authority approved the protocols of our randomized controlled trial (reference number 2021-01658).

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1126/science.abm0475
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:13791

Funding

University of Chicago
Danish National Research Foundation
DNRF134
Swiss National Science Foundation
PZ00P1_201956
Swiss National Science Foundation
100018_185176
Columbia Business School, Columbia University
Riksbankens Jubileumsfond

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Booth School of Business
Department(s)
Behavioral Science