nep-evo New Economics Papers
on Evolutionary Economics
Issue of 2023‒11‒06
one paper chosen by
Matthew Baker, City University of New York


  1. The fundamental properties, stability and predictive power of distributional preferences By Ernst Fehr; Thomas Epper; Julien Senn

  1. By: Ernst Fehr; Thomas Epper; Julien Senn
    Abstract: Parsimony is a desirable feature of economic models but almost all human behaviors are characterized by vast individual variation that appears to defy parsimony. How much parsimony do we need to give up to capture the fundamental aspects of a population’s distributional preferences and to maintain high predictive ability? Using a Bayesian nonparametric clustering method that makes the trade-off between parsimony and descriptive accuracy explicit, we show that three preference types—an inequality averse, an altruistic and a predominantly selfish type—capture the essence of behavioral heterogeneity. These types independently emerge in four different data sets and are strikingly stable over time. They predict out-of-sample behavior equally well as a model that permits all individuals to differ and substantially better than a representative agent model and a state-of-the-art machine learning algorithm. Thus, a parsimonious model with three stable types captures key characteristics of distributional preferences and has excellent predictive power.
    Keywords: Distributional preferences, altruism, inequality aversion, preference heterogeneity, stability, out-of-sample prediction, parsimony, bayesian nonparametrics
    JEL: D31 D63 C49 C90
    Date: 2023–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:zur:econwp:439&r=evo

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