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Beliefs and preferences as predictors of prophylactic adherence and lockdown compliance in South Africa

journal contribution
posted on 2023-08-30, 13:15 authored by Nichola NichollsNichola Nicholls, Eleni Yitbarek, Marc Willinger, Damien Jourdain, Stefano Farolfi, Eric Mungatana

This is the dataset and dofile for the project. The published paper in Development Southern Africa will be available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/0376835X.2023.2252462

Much of the research on behavioural preferences as predictors of compliance with regulations aimed at reducing the transmission of COVID-19 has focused on developed countries, with very little consideration of African countries. We conduct an online survey (n=1503) considering beliefs, and individual and social preferences as predictors of compliance with prophylactic measures and lockdown regulations in South Africa. We use incentivized experimental measures of individual (risk and time) preferences and social preferences (cooperativeness and altruism). We also consider survey measures of risk tolerance, patience and trust. We find that beliefs about others’ behaviour are highly predictive of reported behaviour. We also find that greater patience and cooperativeness are predictive of high compliance with prophylactic measures and lockdown regulations. Encouragingly, respondents report higher compliance at higher lockdown levels, suggesting responsiveness of behaviour to the level of risk of infection.

Funding

African Academy of Sciences

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Economics

Sustainable Development Goals

  • 3 Good Health and Well-Being

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    Economic and Management Sciences

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