Behavioral economics: Introduction Colin Camerer, Caltech RES Easter School 22-25 Mar 2015 • What is it? •Use facts about natural [biological] limits on computation, willpower and self-interest to improve economics •History: •Why was psychology ignored? • Questions to eventually answer –What happens in equilibrium? –Welfare and policy This deck is for personal scholarly use only. Do not quote, circulate, or use for teaching.
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Behavioral economics: Introduction Colin Camerer, Caltech RES Easter School 22-25 Mar 2015 What is it? Use facts about natural [biological] limits on computation,
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• What is it?•Use facts about natural [biological] limits on computation, willpower and self-interest to improve economics
•History: •Why was psychology ignored?
• Questions to eventually answer–What happens in equilibrium?–Welfare and policy
This deck is for personal scholarly use only. Do not quote, circulate, or use for teaching.
Precursor: What is economics?
• Consumer theory– Maximize utility given preferences and information, subject to
constraint
Max u(x1,x2,…xn|θ) s.t. Σi pixi <y (income)
• Demand– From consumer theory – Complicated by risk, time, probability judgment (given θ)– Assume social independence of demand (no “fashion”)
• Supply– Firms combine capital and hired labor to produce output– Sorting of different workers into ideal jobs (Becker: “That takes
care of 90% of it”)
Allowing imperfection always improves economics
Perfect competition (∞ firms)Useful special case, helpful to relax (product differentiation, oligopoly)
Perfect information (θ = truth) Useful special case, helpful to relax(costly hidden information & action, signaling)
Perfect rationality (max u(x))Useful special case, helpful to relax(costly information processing, heterogeneity)
What do economists study? AER March 07
• The Missing Motivation in MacroeconomicsGeorge A. AkerlofCompetence Implies CredibilityGiuseppe MoscariniModeling the Transition to a New Economy: Lessons from Two Technological RevolutionsAndrew Atkeson and Patrick J. KehoeThe Cross Section of Foreign Currency Risk Premia and Consumption Growth RiskHanno Lustig and Adrien VerdelhanInefficiency in Legislative Policymaking: A Dynamic AnalysisMarco Battaglini and Stephen CoateDecision Making in Committees: Transparency, Reputation, and Voting RulesGilat LevyBureaucrats or Politicians? Part I: A Single Policy TaskAlberto Alesina and Guido TabelliniThe Motivation and Bias of BureaucratsCanice PrendergastUrban Evolutions: The Fast, the Slow, and the StillGilles DurantonMarket Share Dynamics and the "Persistence of Leadership" DebateJohn Sutton
• Internet Advertising and the Generalized Second-Price Auction: Selling Billions of Dollars Worth of KeywordsBenjamin Edelman, Michael Ostrovsky and Michael SchwarzCredible Sales Mechanisms and IntermediariesDavid McAdams and Michael SchwarzImprecision as an Account of the Preference Reversal PhenomenonDavid J. Butler and Graham C. LoomesDo Workers Work More if Wages Are High? Evidence from a Randomized Field ExperimentErnst Fehr and Lorenz GoetteThe Effect of Court-Ordered Hiring Quotas on the Composition and Quality of PoliceJustin McCraryThe Economic Impacts of Climate Change: Evidence from Agricultural Output and Random Fluctuations in WeatherOlivier Deschênes and Michael GreenstoneWhat Are Stock Investors’ Actual Historical Returns? Evidence from Dollar-Weighted ReturnsIlia D. Dichev
What model features are useful?
• Neoclassical economics:– Generality– applies to many domains– Precision– produces clear predictions– Accuracy– predictions are tested by field data
• Behavioral economics:– All of above
+ psychological plausibility– fit data on how individuals think, perceive etc.
Why psychology was ignored:Milton Friedman, Methodology of
Positive Economics (1953)• “The abstract methodological issues we have
been discussing have a direct bearing on the perennial criticism of “orthodox” economic theory as “unrealistic” as well as on the attempts that have been made to reformulate theory to meet this charge. Economics is a “dismal” science because it assumes man to be selfish and money-grubbing, “a lightning calculator of pleasures and pains, who oscillates like a homogeneous globule of desire of happiness under the impulse of stimuli that shift him about the area, but leave him intact”; it rests on outmoded psychology and must be reconstructed in line with each new development in psychology;…”
Forgotten passage…
• “As we have seen, criticism of this type [about accuracy of assumptions] is largely beside the point unless supplemented by evidence that a hypothesis differing in one or another of these respects from the theory being criticised yields better predictions for as wide a range of phenomena. (mytalics)”
• That is precisely what behavioral economics tries to do…
precisely
precisely
Claim: Many important economic decisions will not necessarily be‘computed’ correctly
• Housing• Marriage/divorce• Children• Education & career choices• Violence (crime, war)• Health
Claim: Many important economic decisions will not necessarily be‘computed’ correctly
• Why not?– Many are political decisions (median voter
theorem)– Evolution did not face these challenges– Learning from experience is difficult– Advice markets may or may not work well– Imitation of successful people may or may not
work well
Examples
• Computation– Chess, consumer choice
• Willpower– Hyperbolic discounting
• Greed– Ultimatum games
Do markets correct mistakes?
• Tug-of-war:– Firms sort to limit rationality mistakes from
• Not everyone is the same– Differences create division of labor,
specialization– Interactions are interesting: Is the effect of
limitedly-rational agents multiplied or erased? (Fehr Camerer Sci 07)
• Individual differences• Gender, lifecycle, IQ, patience• Example: Aging and credit (Laibson et al 07)
Pareto believed optimization was due to learning…
• [W]e are concerned only with certain relations between objective facts and subjective facts, principally the tastes of men. Moreover, we will simplify the problem still more by assuming that the subjective fact conforms perfectly to the objective fact. This can be done because we will consider only repeated actions to be a basis for claiming that there is a logical connection uniting such actions.
• A man who buys a certain food for the first time may buy more of it than is necessary to satisfy his tastes, price taken into account. But in a second purchase he will correct his error, in part at least, and thus, little by little, will end up by procuring exactly what he needs. We will examine this action at the time when he has reached this state.
– Shaked “pamphlet” on social prefs, Rubinstein, Gul and Pesendorfer (05) (echo of Pareto-Friedman argument), Levine (“Is behavioral economics doomed?”)
– Relatively easy to publish ‘ refutations’ of behavioral economics findings (Plott-Zeiler AER, Manaiadis AEJ, AER, Sprenger AER…)
auto…)– My view: Theories that fit the most data and make
sharp, bold predictions are preferred• Field data
– Friedman’s desideratum– what new effects are predicted & explained?
Conclusions• Behavioral economics is now well-established
– Should cease to be a distinct subfield around 2015
• Grounds economics in psychology and biology• Imperfect rationality is as natural as
– Imperfect competition– Imperfect information
• Interesting questions about market equilibrium• Controversies are healthy (normal science)
– E.g. reference points are fragile
• Frontiers:– Field data, careful theory, “new” psychology…
Some critique• “The conclusion of so-called behavioral
economics is that people don’t behave in a rational way, that they don’t respond as expected to economic incentives. Empirical economics shows that people do respond very precisely to economic incentives.” (Robert Aumann interview 9/04 http://www.ma.huji.ac.il/~hart/papers/md-aumann.pdf?. )
• Not quite: People respond imprecisely (perhaps slowly) to incentives. And they respond to variables which are not incentives (not prices, income, or information)
Conscious computation and “as if” • “The thesis that behavioral economics attacks is that people
behave rationally in a conscious way—that they consciously calculate and make an optimal decision based, in each case, on rational calculations. [Ed. : False] Perhaps behavioral economists are right that that is not so. Because their experiments or polls show that people, when faced with certain kinds of decisions, do not make the rational decision. However, nobody ever claimed that; they are attacking a straw man, a dead horse. What is claimed is that economic agents behave in a way that could be described as derived from rationality considerations; not that they actually are derived that way, that they actually go through a process of optimization each time they make a decision.” (Aumann interview)
• Not so: We are questioning predictions of the “as if” view and attempting to construct models which make better predictions. Read Friedman carefully...