This thesis introduces Digital Institutional Behavioral Design (DIBD), a novel theoretical framework that integrates insights from behavioral economics, institutional theory, and digital transformation to address persistent development challenges in the 21st century. Traditional approaches to institutional development have largely failed to achieve sustainable economic growth in developing countries because they ignore the cognitive and behavioral constraints that prevent effective institutional adoption and utilization. The DIBD framework proposes that digital institutions can be designed to work with, rather than against, human behavioral patterns to overcome development traps and accelerate economic progress. The central contribution of this work is the concept of "Cognitive-Institutional Alignment" - the degree to which digital institutional design aligns with human cognitive biases, heuristics, and decision-making patterns prevalent in developing economies. Through empirical analysis of data from 19 major economies spanning 2020-2023, this thesis demonstrates that countries with higher DIBD readiness indices show significantly stronger correlations with economic development outcomes (R² = 0.090, p < 0.01). The framework introduces five core design principles: Cognitive Load Minimization, Behavioral Nudge Integration, Cultural Cognitive Mapping, Feedback Loop Optimization, and Institutional Behavioral Scaffolding. These principles provide a systematic approach to designing digital institutions that leverage behavioral insights to overcome traditional development barriers including poverty traps, institutional trust deficits, information asymmetries, and coordination failures. The thesis presents compelling evidence that DIBD-designed digital institutions can create multiplicative rather than additive development effects by reducing cognitive load for users, increasing adoption rates through behavioral nudges, creating positive feedback loops that reinforce beneficial behaviors, and overcoming traditional institutional barriers through behavioral design. The empirical analysis reveals strong positive correlations between digital infrastructure development, institutional quality, and economic outcomes, supporting the theoretical predictions of the DIBD framework. Policy implications include a five-phase implementation strategy encompassing assessment of local cognitive patterns, behavioral design of digital institutions, pilot testing with behavioral monitoring, broad-scale implementation, and continuous iteration based on behavioral data. The framework offers particular promise for addressing the digital divide not merely as a technological challenge, but as an opportunity to leapfrog traditional institutional development constraints through behaviorally-informed digital design. This work contributes to the literature by providing the first comprehensive framework that explicitly integrates behavioral insights into digital institutional design for development purposes. Unlike traditional institutional approaches that assume rational actors, or pure behavioral interventions that ignore institutional context, DIBD offers a novel synthesis that addresses both individual behavioral realities and institutional requirements for sustainable development.
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Kwan Hong Tan
Singapore University of Social Sciences
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Kwan Hong Tan (Sun,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/695d8e5f3483e917927a5762 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18142851
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