Abstract

We estimate 11 well-studied behavioral phenomena in a group of 190 laboratory subjects (short-term discount rates, small stakes risk aversion, present bias, loss aversion, the endowment effect, aversion to ambiguity and compound lotteries, the common ratio and common consequence effects and sender/receiver behavior in trust games). We study the joint distribution of these behaviors and compare it to the predictions of existing models as a step in the development of a parsimonious, general model of economic choice. We find strong correlations between loss aversion and the endowment effect, and between probability weighting (as measured by the common ratio and common consequence effects) and risk aversion, in line with Cumulative Prospect Theory (CPT). We also find risk aversion to be related to ambiguity aversion, compound lottery aversion and discounting, consistent with the curvature of the utility function being an important determinant of all three behaviors. However, we do not find evidence that probability weighting in the risk domain is related to ambiguity and compound lottery aversion or present bias (as implied by recent extensions to CPT). Behavior in the trust game is unrelated to attitudes to risk or uncertainty. We find little relation between intelligence or personality measures and economic behavior, although we do find overconfidence to be negatively related to many behaviors (particularly ambiguity aversion) and women to be much more loss averse than men.

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