Abstract
ECONOMIC DECISION MAKING UNDER UNCERTAINTY often takes place in the presence of multiple and in markets that are less than complete. As a consequence, choices about endogenous sometimes must be made while simultaneously facing one or more immutable exogenous risks that are not under the control of the agent, and that are independent of endogenous risks. It is somehow natural to assume that an exogenous deterioration in background wealth will cause an individual to take more care elsewhere. If we define a deterioration, for example, as making the individual poorer by removing a fixed amount of initial wealth, we know from Pratt (1964) that decreasing absolute risk aversion (DARA) of an individual's von Neumann-Morgenstern utility function yields this natural result. If, on the other hand, background wealth becomes riskier due to the addition of a zero-mean risk, that is also statistically independent of all other risks, behavior will be more risk averse if and only if preferences are risk vulnerable as defined by Gollier and Pratt (1996). Risk vulnerability (described below in Section 4) is a stronger notion than DARA and includes proper risk aversion (Pratt and Zeckhauser (1987)) and standard risk aversion (Eeckhoudt and Kimball (1992), Kimball (1993)) as particular cases. But a deterioration in background wealth may encompass more complicated distribution changes than the introduction of another statistically independent risk. In this paper, we examine background wealth deteriorations that take the form of both general firstand second-degree stochastic dominance changes in risk (FSD and SSD respectively). In particular, we determine conditions that are both necessary and sufficient for each of these two types of background risk changes to imply more risk-averse behavior on the part of the individual. For the case of FSD changes, this condition turns out to be Ross' stronger characterization of decreasing absolute risk aversion. In the case of general SSD changes in the distribution of background wealth, the condition derived is a stronger version (in Ross' sense) of the conditions characterizing preferences that are locally risk vulnerable in the sense of Gollier and Pratt. The necessary and sufficient conditions derived are fairly restrictive upon preferences. However, if we take as positive behavior that individuals act in a more risk-averse manner whenever the distribution of background wealth deteriorates, these conditions place canonical limits upon appropriate utility representations. At the very least, they
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