Uncertainty Breeds Decreasing Impatience
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Date
2009Type
- Working Paper
ETH Bibliography
yes
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Abstract
Future events are uncertain by their very nature. Therefore, people's risk preferences are likely to play a role in the valuation of allegedly guaranteed future outcomes. We show that future uncertainty conjointly with people's proneness to nonlinear probability weighting generates a unifying framework for explaining many anomalies in intertemporal choice, such as hyperbolic discounting and subadditivity of discount factors. Moreover, our approach implies that higher uncertainty of future prospects increases the hyperbolicity of discount rates, suggesting that institutional deficiencies such as lack of contract enforcement, may be a source of hyperbolic discounting behavior. Based on an experiment with monetary incentives, we show that people's risk taking behavior is indeed a significant determinant of their time discounting behavior: Greater departures from linear probability weighting predict a stronger decline in impatience on the level of individual behavior. Show more
Publication status
publishedJournal / series
Working paper seriesVolume
Publisher
University of Zurich, Institute for Empirical Research in EconomicsSubject
Institutionally Generated Uncertainty; Time Preferences; Risk Preferences; Hyperbolic Discounting; Probability WeightingMore
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ETH Bibliography
yes
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