Brune, LasseKerwin, Jason T.Li, Qingxiao2024-01-172024-01-172022-01-08The World Bank Economic Review0258-6770 (print)1564-698X (online)https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/40912Temptation plays a key role in theoretical work on spending and saving in developing countries. The limited empirical evidence on its importance, however, suggests that cash transfers do not induce increases in temptation spending. This paper expands the evidence base by studying the effect of randomized exposure to temptation on spending decisions in rural Malawi. Consistent with the cash transfer literature, a more tempting environment does not induce significant changes in temptation spending. However, the magnitudes of both temptation spending levels and the treatment effects are somewhat sensitive to the definition of temptation spending used. This paper examines the potential factors that may be driving these 0 results, and suggests that future research may find a limited role for temptation in the economic decisions of the poor.en-USCC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGOTEMPTATION SPENDINGSELF-CONTROLBEHAVIORAL ECONOMICSDEVELOPMENT ECONOMICSHow Important Is Temptation Spending? Maybe Less than We ThoughtJournal ArticleWorld Bank10.1596/40912