Abstract

Purpose The relevance of present consumption bias on personal finance has been confirmed in several studies and has important theoretical and practical implications. It has important, measurable implications when analyzing commitment or self-control, adherence to healthy habits (e.g. exercising or dieting), procrastination tendencies or savings. The purpose of this paper is to contribute to our understanding of these issues by postulating a model of income uncertainty within a hyperbolic discounting framework that measures the cost of financial intertemporal inconsistencies related to this bias. The emphasis is on the analysis of this cost. We also propose experimental designs and consistent estimation methods, as well as agent-based modelling extensions. Design/methodology/approach The authors develop a finite-horizon model with hyperbolic preferences. Individuals have a present bias distinct from their discount rate so their choices face intertemporal inconsistencies. The authors further extend the analysis with uncertainty about future incomes. Specifically, individuals live for three periods, and the authors find the optimal consumption levels in the perfect-information benchmark by backward induction. They then proceed to add biases and uncertainty to characterize their implications and measure the costs of the intertemporal inconsistencies they cause. Findings The authors measure how an agent's utility is greater when they “tie their hands” than when they are free to re-evaluate and change their consumption schedule. This “cost of being vulnerable to falling into temptation” only depends (increasingly) on the measure of the present bias and (decreasingly) on the discount factor. They analyze the varying effects on utility and consumption of changes in impatience and optimism. They conclude by discussing theoretical and practical implications; they also propose agent-based simulations, as well as empirical and experimental designs, to further test the relevance and applications of the results. Practical implications This model has important, measurable implications when analyzing commitment or self-control, adherence to healthy habits (e.g. exercising or dieting), procrastination tendencies or savings. Social implications The results enhance the estimation of the costs of present biases such that employers can better identify the incentives required to acquire and retain human capital. The authors provide evidence that workers are vulnerable to contract renegotiations and about the need for a regulator that restores ex-ante efficiency. Similarly, in the private sector, firms could recognize the postulated consumer profiles and focus their resources on anxious, too-optimistic or potentially addictive consumers; this, again, provides some justification about the need for a regulator. Originality/value In traditional exponential discounting, the marginal rate of substitution of consumption between two points depends only on their distance; thus, it allows none of the intertemporal inconsistencies we often observe in real life. Therefore, hyperbolic discounting better fits the data. The authors model choice under uncertainty and focus on the costs caused when present biases (ex-post) push behaviour away from ex-ante optimality. They conclude by proposing experimental designs to further enhance the estimation and implications of these costs. The postulated refinements have the potential to improve previous analyses on commitment devices and commitment-related regulation.

Highlights

  • Recent literature provides evidence about how the hyperbolic discounting model (Laibson, 1997) is a good predictor of human and animal choices (Dasgupta and Maskin, 2005; Redden, 2007; Thaler and Benartzi, 2004)[1]. It is a generalization of the exponential discounting model that assumes agents have a preference for present consumption and, when lacking self-control, will face intertemporal inconsistencies in their choices inasmuch as these choices are evaluated differently through different periods

  • We find that individuals pay a cost when they are victims of present bias temptation and we analyze the decision paths agents follow when their behavioural characteristics vary: impatience, optimism, wealth and other initial conditions

  • Model: hyperbolic discounting under uncertainty Our contribution is related to the effects of future expectations on income and the costs generated by the deviation from optimal future decisions

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Summary

Introduction

Recent literature provides evidence about how the hyperbolic discounting model (Laibson, 1997) is a good predictor of human and animal choices (Dasgupta and Maskin, 2005; Redden, 2007; Thaler and Benartzi, 2004)[1] It is a generalization of the exponential discounting model that assumes agents have a preference for present consumption (a present bias) and, when lacking self-control, will face intertemporal inconsistencies in their choices inasmuch as these choices are evaluated differently through different periods. Literature review Redden (2007) finds that the hyperbolic discounting model is a good fit for agent behaviour as it reflects the tendency to choose immediate rewards because of impatience He shows this model can be applied to self-control and addiction issues and, in general, contributes to the understanding of the difference between active vs passive interest rates. It should be noted that the literature does not generally consider hyperbolic preferences irrational but an extension of rationality modelling

Consumption and savings through time
Timing
Untied hands model
Tied hands model: forward induction optimal paths
Conclusions
Mathematical appendices
Global maxima and minima

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