USING BEHAVIOURAL INSIGHTS TO PROMOTE ACTIVE EURO-
PEAN CONSUMERS
The Fitness Check of the consumer area evaluates if EU consumer law is
fit for purpose on the basis of the criteria of effectiveness, efficiency, co-
herence, relevance and EU added value of the existing EU legislation.
The Fitness Check is an important exercise, because active consumers are
an important part of the Single Market, as active consumers make de-
mands on businesses which give them incentives to provide better service.
This can lead to an improvement in competition and create well-
functioning markets. The result of the Fitness Check will hopefully make
it easier for consumers and businesses to navigate within the area of the
directives that are subject to the Fitness Check.
Behavioral insights
refers to the range of behavioral science research into
how biases influence consumer decision making. The term has gained
prominence as a result of the wealth of research calling into question the
traditional assumption that consumers and citizens act like rational agents
in the marketplace. Behavioral insights are an obvious mean to ensuring
that regulation aligns with actual consumer behavior to the benefit of both
consumers and businesses.
The gap between the intended consumer protection of information disclo-
sure requirements and the observed consumer behaviour especially calls
for the consideration of insights from behavioural sciences.
This non-paper aims at emphasizing the importance of continuing the
implementation of behavioural insights in the refit and development of
EU consumer and marketing law.
From Full Disclosure to Targeted Disclosure
This non-paper argues that we should strive to shift from full information
disclosure to better targeted information disclosure based on evidence,
impact assessments and behavioural insights.
When regulation forces businesses to expose consumers to large quanti-
ties of information at once, there is a risk of consumers being uncritical
and inactive. Furthermore, an overload of information limits the compa-
rability of products across providers. This implies that the actual effect of
the regulation may be counterproductive
–
for the consumer as well as for
competition in markets.