Back to 2021 Programme

Enforcement and Deterrence with Certain Detection: An Experiment in Water Conservation Policy

Oliver R. Browne, The Brattle Group; Ludovica Gazze, University of Warwick; Michael Greenstone, University of Chicago; Olga Rostapshova, University of Chicago

D20 Influence, monitoring and enforcement in public institutions

Abstract

New technologies are poised to transform regulatory enforcement by automating costly inspections and driving violation detection rates to 100%. We conduct a randomized field experiment to evaluate the adoption of smart meters for enforcing outdoor water-use regulations in a major US city facing water scarcity. We randomize 88,905 households into 12 groups varying enforcement method (automated or visual inspection) and fine levels. Automated enforcement decreases water use by 3% and violations by 17%. However, due to imperfect deterrence, fines increase by 13,800% and customer service calls increase by 545%, leading to backlash that might make maximum enforcement politically untenable.