Rational Choice Model Flashcards
Is the rational choice model found in both realism and liberalism?
Common to both realism and liberalism
What does rational choice place great esteem in?
The open-mindedness + adaptability of FP decision makers
What is rational choice?
- Orderly + logical approach to decision making
- That people should choose to use
How does rational choice work?
Preferences are ranked: If I prefer A to B, and B to C, then I prefer A to C
So decision makers can resolve conflicts by measuring along single attribute - subjective utility - and trading off to find best outcome
So complex measurements are made simple
Does rational choice mirror real life?
- FP decision makers rarely meet these standards
- Thus models don’t mirror real life well at all
What was the Cognitive Revolution?
- 40 years ago, psychologists began a cognitive revolution
- Found that people are predictably irrational
What are the 4 key reasons for people being predictably irrational?
- Analogical reasoning
- People prefer consistency
- Cognitive biases
- FP makers not neutral about risk
Why do decision makers tend to use analogical reasoning?
- Decision makers need to order the world to make it less complex
- Do so through analogical reasoning: looking to the past to learn about the future
Give an example of people using analogical reasoning
- During Greek financial crisis
- Calls from German officials calling for austerity were labelled as Nazi behaviour
- Fitting German demands into an existing frame
- Gave Greeks who opposed terms of bailout a ready rebuttal
What is the consequence of people preferring consistency?
- People strongly prefer consistency + are made uncomfortable by dissonant information
- So they consequently deny / discount information in order to preserve beliefs
- Indeed exposure to contradictory information frequently results in strengthening of their beliefs
What is the result of cognitive biases?
- Lead to serious errors in attribution
- Can impair judgement
- Confound policymaking
Why are FP makers not neutral about risk?
- Because loss is more painful than comparable gain is pleasant
- Thus people prefer an immediate small gain to taking a chance on a large long-term reward
Why is a mistake to consider rational choice models as empirically valid in foreign policy analysis?
These factors are so pervasive it is a mistake to consider rational choice models as empirically valid in FP analysis