Energy Transition and Fiscal Preferences: A Survey Experiment

Last registered on December 10, 2025

Pre-Trial

Trial Information

General Information

Title
Energy Transition and Fiscal Preferences: A Survey Experiment
RCT ID
AEARCTR-0017200
Initial registration date
December 04, 2025

Initial registration date is when the trial was registered.

It corresponds to when the registration was submitted to the Registry to be reviewed for publication.

First published
December 09, 2025, 7:41 AM EST

First published corresponds to when the trial was first made public on the Registry after being reviewed.

Last updated
December 10, 2025, 2:00 PM EST

Last updated is the most recent time when changes to the trial's registration were published.

Locations

Region

Primary Investigator

Affiliation
University of Wyoming

Other Primary Investigator(s)

PI Affiliation
University of Wyoming

Additional Trial Information

Status
In development
Start date
2025-12-09
End date
2025-12-12
Secondary IDs
Prior work
This trial does not extend or rely on any prior RCTs.
Abstract
State governments in fossil-fuel-rich states rely heavily on revenue generated from oil, gas, and coal extraction. This dependence creates a cyclical pattern in fiscal policy, as tax rates and public services adjust to booms and busts in these economies. These fluctuations introduce persistent fiscal volatility that directly affects local communities. The possibility of a future move away from fossil-fuels and towards greener energy puts these communities dependent on fossil-fuel at a higher risk.

Under these possible transitions, resource-reliant states face a real risk of out-migration. In this study, we analyze how fiscal adjustments influence people’s decisions to leave their state. We also examine different strategies for attracting new residents, especially in smaller towns that are most vulnerable. While large cities offer numerous economic opportunities, small towns have a distinct set of natural, infrastructural, social, and community-based amenities that can influence people’s willingness to relocate. To study these different strategies, we focus on Laramie, Wyoming as a small town within a fossil-fuel state.

We implement a nationwide online survey through Prolific. Respondents living in fossil-fuel-reliant states are asked what fiscal changes would influence their decision to leave the state. Respondents irrespective of their state of residence are asked to about their willingness to move to Laramie under a set of informational treatments such as fiscal, infrastructural, natural, socio-economic, and placemaking. Finally, we compare in-migration responses between residents of resource-rich states and those from other states.

By examining fiscal preferences and migration decisions, this research contributes to the broader discussion on how fossil-fuel-dependent communities can remain resilient in the face of a possible transition toward greener energy in the United States.
External Link(s)

Registration Citation

Citation
James, Alexander and Srutakirti Mukherjee. 2025. "Energy Transition and Fiscal Preferences: A Survey Experiment." AEA RCT Registry. December 10. https://doi.org/10.1257/rct.17200-2.0
Experimental Details

Interventions

Intervention(s)
We run an online survey experiment through Prolific that targets United States residents above the age of eighteen. The survey is designed in Qualtrics and will be administered on Prolific.

The survey has four sections (1) demographics and socio-economic background, (2) experiment 1 (Out-Migration), (3) experiment 2 (In-migration to Laramie, WY.), and (4) choice of fiscal policy to counter fossil-fuel revenue decline,

In the first experiment, respondents residing in one of the ten resource-rich states (Alaska, Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas, and Wyoming) are randomly assigned to one of seven scenarios and asked about their likelihood of moving out of their current state over the next three years. In the baseline scenario, respondents are simply asked about their likelihood of moving to a different state in the next three years. In the six treatment scenarios, respondents are told to imagine a 10% reduction in state government revenue due to a fall in fossil-fuel production, and that their state government responds with a different fiscal policy in each treatment: (i) raising the average property tax rate; (ii) raising the average sales tax rate; (iii) raising the average individual income tax rate; (iv) cutting public spending on education; (v) cutting public spending on healthcare; and (vi) cutting public spending on infrastructure.

In the second experiment, all respondents from all states are asked about their willingness to move to Laramie, Wyoming under varying informational treatments. In the control group, subjects are given basic innocuous information about Laramie, WY. (e.g., that it is a college town and that it is at an elevation of 7,200 ft). Treatments will provide subjects with one of three pieces of additional information about Laramie, WY., depending on treatment: i) tax policy, ii) socio-economic conditions, or iii) natural amenities. Further, each of the treatments and the control will be presented with either i) a real image of downtown Laramie, WY., or ii) a modified one that enhanced place-making modifications (including things like urban greenery and pedestrian friendly design).

The two experiments are shown in a randomized order to control for order effects.
Intervention (Hidden)
Intervention Start Date
2025-12-10
Intervention End Date
2025-12-12

Primary Outcomes

Primary Outcomes (end points)
Depending on the experiment, the outcome variable with be either:
1. Willingness to leave your current state of residence measured as a self-reported score from 0-100.
2. Willingness to move to Laramie measured as a self-reported score from 0-100.
3. Life satisfaction from moving to, and living in, Laramie, Wyoming measured as a self-reported score from 0-100.
4. (Log) time subjects spend voluntarily collecting additional information about Laramie.
5. Number of total clicks subjects make when collecting additional information about Laramie.
6. Whether subjects click on specific links to gather information about i) schools, ii) job opening, iii) housing, iv) general information in Laramie.
Primary Outcomes (explanation)
Most of the primary outcome variables are directly measured. Time taken reading about Laramie with be transformed using the natural log function.

Secondary Outcomes

Secondary Outcomes (end points)
We will estimate heterogeneous treatment effects by interacting the treatment indicators with the following pre-specified characteristics:
1) the presence of dependents below the age of eighteen, 2) age, 3) income, 4) employment status, 5) political ideology (measured as a binary variable derived from a left/liberal and right/conservative Likert scale), voting behavior in the 2024 Presidential election, 6) the subject stated mobility (ranging from rooted, stuck, to mobile), and 7) respondents’ state of residence

For respondents in fossil-fuel-rich states, we will examine whether treatment effects vary with: 1) indicator for direct or indirect employment in the fossil-fuel industry, 2) fiscal policy preference (tax raise or spending cut) in the event of a fossil-fuel revenue decline, 3) updated fiscal preference after exposure to different categories of tax and spending options, (4) preferences over the type of taxes should increase or which income-groups should face the tax-burden, and (5) preferences over which public service categories should face spending cuts.

In the Laramie-specific experiment, we will additionally explore heterogeneities based on 1) whether subject currently resides in a top-10 fossil-fuel-rich state or in any other state, 2) resides in a state neighboring Wyoming, 3) intends to pursue higher education (given that the general information mentions the University of Wyoming), 4) holds a job that allows fully remote work, and 5) reports entrepreneurial intent, 6) is familiar with Laramie.

We will examine treatment effects for the full sample and for the subset of i) respondents who self-report that they are mobile, ii) residents in the neighboring states of Wyoming (for the experiment about moving to Laramie)
Secondary Outcomes (explanation)

Experimental Design

Experimental Design
The survey uses a between-subjects experimental design. This study has two online surveys administered through Prolific. (i) an “oil-rich states” survey administered only to respondents currently residing in the top ten fossil-fuel dependent states (Alaska, Colorado, Kansas, Louisiana, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas, and Wyoming), and (ii) an “oil-poor-states” survey administered to respondents from the remaining states. The screening for the surveys will be conducted using Prolific’s pre-screening tool to restrict participation to residents of the designated states. State-of-residence will be verified again at the start of the survey.

The two surveys share common demographic and background questions, but have different experimental modules. The experiment about out-migration is only administered in the oil-rich survey, and the experiments about in-migration is distributed in both the surveys.

In the first experiment, respondents living in the top ten fossil-fuel dependent states are randomly assigned to one of three hypothetical scenarios describing how their state might respond to a large decline in fossil-fuel revenue. After reading the assigned scenario, respondents report how likely they would be to move to a different state in the next three years. The scenarios are:

Baseline: Respondents are simply asked how likely they are to move to a different state in the next three years.

Treatment 1 (Property Tax Increase) : Respondents are told to imagine a 10% reduction in state government revenue due to a fall in fossil-fuel production, and that their state government responds by mandating a rise in the average local property tax rate.

Treatment 2 (Sales Tax Increase) : Respondents are told to imagine a 10% reduction in state government revenue due to a fall in fossil-fuel production, and that their state government responds by increasing the average sales tax rate.

Treatment 3 (Individual Income Tax Increase) : Respondents are told to imagine a 10% reduction in state government revenue due to a fall in fossil-fuel production, and that their state government responds by increasing the average individual income tax rate.

Treatment 4 (Spending Cut on Education) : Respondents are told to imagine the same 10% revenue decline, but that their state government responds by cutting public spending on education.

Treatment 5 (Spending Cut on Healthcare) : Respondents are told to imagine the same 10% revenue decline, but that their state government responds by cutting public spending on healthcare.

Treatment 6 (Spending Cut on Infrastructure) : Respondents are told to imagine the same 10% revenue decline, but that their state government responds by cutting public spending on infrastructure.

All respondents, regardless of state of residence, participate in a second experiment that elicits their willingness to move to Laramie, Wyoming under different informational and visual treatments. Each respondent is shown images of downtown Laramie either original images or modified images that visually incorporate placemaking improvements (e.g., added urban greenery, pedestrian-friendly streetscape design). After viewing the assigned information and images, respondents report how likely they would be to move to Laramie in the next three years.

The experiment consists of seven scenarios:
Baseline (General Information - Original Images): Respondents are shown general information about Laramie along with original photographs.

Treatment 1 (Tax Environment - Original Images) : Along with same general information as the baseline scenario, respondents receive additional information describing Laramie’s tax environment (e.g., absence of state income tax, relative tax burden). They are shown original images.

Treatment 2 (Tax Environment - Enhanced Images) : Identical informational treatment as in treatment 1, but respondents are shown visually enhanced images with placemaking improvements.

Treatment 3 (Socio-Economic Factors - Original Images) : Along with same general information as the baseline scenario, respondents receive information about cost of living, unemployment rates, safety, and community amenities in Laramie, accompanied by original downtown images.

Treatment 4 (Socio-Economic Factors - Enhanced Images): Identical socio-economic information as in treatment 3, but respondents are shown visually enhanced images with placemaking improvements.

Treatment 5 (Natural Amenities - Scenic Image) : Along with same general information as the baseline scenario, respondents receive information about Laramie's outdoor amenities, accompanied by a photograph of the mountain landscape surrounding Laramie

Treatment 6 (General Information - Enhanced Images): Respondents are shown general information about Laramie along visually enhanced images of downtown Laramie with placemaking improvements.

We will estimate treatment effects by regressing respondents’ self-reported scores on indicators for the treatment scenario they were randomly assigned to. We report results both without controls and with a set of demographic and socioeconomic controls. Outcome variables will be treated as continuous variables in baseline regressions. In conditional regressions, covariates include subject i) age, 2) gender, 3) dependents below the age of eighteen, 4) current living arrangement (owns their home, rents, or stays with friends and family), 5) household income, 6) employment status, 7) current work arrangement (fully remote, fully in-person or hybrid), 8) indicator for direct or indirect employment in the fossil-fuel industry, 9) entrepreneurial intent, 10) education, 11) intent to pursue higher education, and12) political ideology.






Experimental Design Details
Randomization Method
Randomization using Qualtrics.
Randomization Unit
Individual
Was the treatment clustered?
No

Experiment Characteristics

Sample size: planned number of clusters
NA
Sample size: planned number of observations
Oil Rich Survey: 1500 Prolific users (approx) Oil Poor Survey: 1500 Prolific users (approx)
Sample size (or number of clusters) by treatment arms
Oil Rich Survey (Experiment 1 + Experiment 2 ): For experiment 1 and 2, we will have 214 respondents in each treatment arm.

Oil Poor Survey (Experiment 2 ): We will have roughly 214 respondents in each arm.
Minimum detectable effect size for main outcomes (accounting for sample design and clustering)
IRB

Institutional Review Boards (IRBs)

IRB Name
University of Wyoming Institutional Review Board
IRB Approval Date
2025-11-11
IRB Approval Number
2025-331

Post-Trial

Post Trial Information

Study Withdrawal

There is information in this trial unavailable to the public. Use the button below to request access.

Request Information

Intervention

Is the intervention completed?
No
Data Collection Complete
Data Publication

Data Publication

Is public data available?
No

Program Files

Program Files
Reports, Papers & Other Materials

Relevant Paper(s)

Reports & Other Materials