3.2.3 - Aspects of Behavioural Economic Theory Flashcards
What is behavioural economics?
A method of economic analysis that applies psychological insights into human behaviour to explain how individuals make choices and decisions.
Where has most of the behavioural economics study come from?
The USA.
Why does the location of study on behavioural economics come from possibly cause problems?
There could be a bias towards the USA as a dominant or ‘correct’ economy.
What is behavioural economics based on?
The insights of psychologists seeking to understand human behaviour and decision making.
What did the UK government set up in 2010?
The Behavioural Insights Team (BIT).
They brought together many disiplines that are closely related. (behavioural economics, psychology and social anthropology)
According to Dan Ariely, what is the difference between traditional economics and behavioural economics?
Traditional economics involves coming up with a theory then using it to explain actual behaviour.
Behavioural economics involves studying actual behaviour, then coming up with a theory.
What is the BIT based on?
Nudge Theory
What is Nudge Theory?
You can change the environment in order to indirectly influence a person’s decision making.
They still maintain free choice, but are essentially incentivized to choose one way or the other.
What is the Homo Economicus?
The Economic Man
What does the Homo Economicus actually mean?
The economic man is:
Self-interested
Aware of the consequences of his actions
Rational
Aware of what he wants
Acting on his preferences
What are the short-comings of Homo Economicus?
People are somewhat altruistic.
Humans are generally impatient and lack self-control
Humans generally have ‘status quo bias’
Research from cognitive psychology suggests that:
Humans make decisions based on simple-rules-of-thumb (heuristics)
Humans have a large variety of biases (confirmation, recency etc.)
Humans can make decisions based on emotions (anger, regret etc.)
What is bounded rationality?
When making decisions, individuals’ rationality is limited by the information they have, information in their minds, and the limited time they have to make a decision.
What can bounded rationality often lead to?
Within complex situations, bounded rationality results in satisficing rather than maximising choices.
What is satisficing?
A decision-making strategy that aims for a satisfactory or adequete result rather than going for the most optimal solution.
What is bounded self-control?
The limited self control in which individuals lack the self-control to act in what they assume to be their best interest.
What do traditional or orthodox economics assume in reference to choice making?
People have complete self-control over their actions.
How do traditional / orthodox economics differ in comparison to behavioural economics in reference to decision making?
Traditional / Orthodox economists assume people have complete self-control of their actions, however, behavioural economists believe that individuals have limited self-control.
What is an example of bounded self-control in practice?
Post Christmas, many people make New Year’s Resolutions to improve themselves. For example, to lose weight. A person will decide to go for a run once a day, working well for a week or two, but when rain falls, the resolution breaks as a result.
What are the two types of thinking?
Thinking fast
Thinking slow