WHO IS ‘BEHAVIORAL’? COGNITIVE ABILITY AND ANOMALOUS PREFERENCES
Cornell University · Capital University · +2 more institutions
Abstract
In this paper, we ask whether variation in preference anomalies is related to variation in cognitive ability. Evidence from a new laboratory study of Chilean high-school students with similar schooling backgrounds shows that small-stakes risk aversion and short-run discounting are less common among those with higher standardized test scores. The relationship with test scores survives controls for parental education and wealth. We find some evidence that elementary-school GPA is predictive of preferences measured at the end of high school. Two laboratory interventions provide suggestive evidence of a possible causal impact of cognitive resources on expressed preferences. (JEL: J24, D14, C91).
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 35.54
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 102
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Preference
- Time preference
- Cognition
- Discounting
- Variation (astronomy)
- Temporal discounting
- Psychological intervention
- Test (biology)
- Quality Education