World Development Report 2015, The World Bank
World Development Report 2015, The World Bank
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World Development Report 2015
Mind, Society, and Behavior

Author: The World Bank

Narrator: Derek Perkins, Helen Clapp, Jaime Andrade, Lisa Hamm-Greenawalt, Michael Pearl

Unabridged: 12 hr 30 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 10/27/2015


Synopsis

This report argues that development policies based on new insights into how people actually think and make decisions will help governments and civil society more readily tackle such challenges as increasing productivity, breaking the cycle of poverty from one generation to the next, and acting on climate change.
Drawing from a wealth of research that suggests ways of diagnosing and solving the psychological and social constraints to development, the World Development Report identifies new policy tools that complement standard economic instruments.
To inspire a fresh look at how development work is done, this report outlines three principles of human decision making: thinking automatically, thinking socially, and thinking with mental models. Much of human thinking is automatic and depends on whatever comes to mind most effortlessly. People are deeply social and are influenced by social networks and norms. Finally, most people do not invent new concepts; rather they use mental models drawn from their societies and shared histories to interpret their experiences.
Because the factors affecting decisions are local and contextual, it is hard to predict in advance which aspects of program design and implementation will drive the choices people will make. Interventions therefore need to take account of the insights found in this report and be designed through a ‘learning by doing’ approach.
This report applies the three principles to multiple areas, including early childhood development, productivity, household finance, health and health care, climate change and more.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Laleema on January 11, 2015

The two systems of thinking is analyzed based on existing research. Worth the read.......more

Goodreads review by Carl on May 31, 2017

Simply extraordinary. Take all of the modern research about how humans make decisions, especially economic decisions, give that to people at the World Bank, and give them 2 years, and you get a remarkable story and guide to fostering economic development around the world. People are NOT poor because......more

Goodreads review by Nils on May 20, 2016

Alternative title: "Behavioral economics for development dummies." A reasonable tour de horizon — but no more than that — of some of the insights concerning heuristics and biases that the Kahneman revolution has introduced into economics, along with some rather unoriginal considerations of how these......more

Goodreads review by Pierre on January 28, 2016

Finally the dismal science is getting a grip on the obvious.......more