Psychology and Economics: Evidence from the Field
University of California, Berkeley
Abstract
The research in Psychology and Economics (a.k.a. Behavioral Economics) suggests that individuals deviate from the standard model in three respects: (1) nonstandard preferences, (2) nonstandard beliefs, and (3) nonstandard 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 charitable giving to labor supply. In the class of nonstandard preferences, I discuss time preferences (self-control problems), risk preferences (reference dependence), and social preferences. On nonstandard beliefs, I present evidence on overconfidence, on the law of small…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 63.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 287
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Overconfidence effect
- Behavioral economics
- Economics
- Framing (construction)
- Persuasion
- Voting
- Framing effect
- Positive economics