Too Big to Comprehend? A Research Note on How Large Number Disclosure Format Affects Voter Support for Government Spending Bills
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2019
Publication Title
Behavioral Research in Accounting
Volume
32
Issue
1
First page number:
149
Last page number:
158
Abstract
Prior research suggests individuals have difficulty comprehending large magnitude numbers commonly associated with government spending (e.g., millions and billions). We conduct an experiment investigating how the disclosure format of large numbers in government spending affects voter support. We find participants' support for proposed government spending is insensitive to cost when presented in total (e.g., “$718 billion” versus “718 million”) but becomes cost-sensitive in response to a practical intervention, disclosing the dollar amounts in more understandable per-household terms (e.g., “$5,744 per U.S. household” versus “5.74 per U.S. household”), and find participant support becomes cost-sensitive after viewing this disclosure format. This research demonstrates how support for government spending can change significantly depending on different (but economically equivalent) disclosure formats. Specifically, the per-household disclosure format increases stakeholders' understanding of large magnitude spending policies and helps them form judgments better informed by their cost-sensitive preferences.
Keywords
Disclosure format; Cost information; Governmental accounting; Spending policy
Disciplines
Accounting | Business
Language
English
Repository Citation
Saiewitz, A.,
Piercey, M. D.
(2019).
Too Big to Comprehend? A Research Note on How Large Number Disclosure Format Affects Voter Support for Government Spending Bills.
Behavioral Research in Accounting, 32(1),
149-158.
http://dx.doi.org/10.2308/bria-18-017