nep-evo New Economics Papers
on Evolutionary Economics
Issue of 2007‒09‒24
one paper chosen by
Matthew Baker
City University of New York

  1. Psychology and Economics: Evidence from the Field By Stefano DellaVigna

  1. By: Stefano DellaVigna
    Abstract: The research in Psychology and Economics (a.k.a. Behavioral Economics) suggests that individuals deviate from the standard model in three respects: (i) non-standard preferences; (ii) non-standard beliefs; and (iii) non-standard decision-making. In this paper, I survey the empirical evidence from the field on these three classes of deviations. The evidence covers a number of applications, from consumption to finance, from crime to voting, from giving to labor supply. In the class of non-standard preferences, I discuss time preferences (self-control problems), risk preferences (reference dependence), and social preferences. On non-standard beliefs, I present evidence on overconfidence, on the law of small numbers, and on projection bias. Regarding non-standard decision-making, I cover limited attention, menu effects, persuasion and social pressure, and emotions. I also present evidence on how rational actors -- firms, employers, CEOs, investors, and politicians -- respond to the non-standard behavior described in the survey. I then summarize five common empirical methodologies used in Psychology and Economics. Finally, I briefly discuss under what conditions experience and market interactions limit the impact of the non-standard features.
    JEL: A1 C91 C93 D00 D64 D91 G1 M3
    Date: 2007–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:nbr:nberwo:13420&r=evo

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