INDIVIDUAL RISK ATTITUDES: MEASUREMENT, DETERMINANTS, AND BEHAVIORAL CONSEQUENCES
Maastricht University · Max Planck Society · +7 more institutions
Abstract
This paper studies risk attitudes using a large representative survey and a complementary experiment conducted with a representative subject pool in subjects' homes. Using a question asking people about their willingness to take risks "in general", we find that gender, age, height, and parental background have an economically significant impact on willingness to take risks. The experiment confirms the behavioral validity of this measure, using paid lottery choices. Turning to other questions about risk attitudes in specific contexts, we find similar results on the determinants of risk attitudes, and also shed light on the deeper question of stability of risk attitudes across contexts. We conduct a horse race…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 532.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 61
Authors
6- TDThomas DohmenCorresponding
Maastricht University
- AFArmin Falk
Max Planck Society, Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods, University of Bonn
- DHDavid Huffman
Swarthmore College
- USUwe Sunde
University of St. Gallen
- JSJürgen Schupp
German Institute for Economic Research, Freie Universität Berlin
Topics & keywords
- Economics
- Behavioral risk
- Psychology
- Econometrics
- Environmental health
- Medicine
- Good health and well-being