Loss Aversion and the Endowment Effect. PastExpected Future Alternative Nearby additional Relevant Observed Current Multiple Alternative Our choices and.

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Presentation transcript:

Loss Aversion and the Endowment Effect

PastExpected Future Alternative Nearby additional Relevant Observed Current Multiple Alternative Our choices and our satisfaction are driven by the comparisons we make

Behavioral Economics Concepts PastExpected Future Alternative Nearby additional Relevant Observed Current Multiple Alternative Hedonic Adaptation Placebo Effect; Stereotypes Peer Effects; Relative Standing Endogenous Determination of Time Preference Anchoring; Paradox of Choice Loss Aversion; Endowment Effect; Status Quo Bias Availability Effects

Reading Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely – Chapter 8: The High Price of Ownership Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman – Chapter 26: Prospect Theory, “Loss Aversion” – Chapter 27: The Endowment Effect

Prospect Theory This is easily the most famous theoretical contribution to behavioral economics – Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision under Risk, by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, Econometrica, Vol. 47, No. 2 (March 1979), pp One of the key components of prospect theory is loss aversion

Two behavioral economics principles 1. The endowment effect “Ownership creates satisfaction” 2. Loss aversion “People are more motivated by avoiding a loss than acquiring a similar gain” Kahneman and Tversky’s “Prospect Theory” describes how people evaluate gains and losses; it includes concepts such as status quo bias, loss aversion, and the endowment effect

The endowment effect People value a thing more once it becomes theirs Ownership increases utility Term originated by Richard Thaler (U. of Chicago) Thaler, R. (University of Chicago), 1980, Toward a positive theory of consumer choice. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, March,

Students who did not get a mug reported the price they would be willing to pay to get one. What happened? a)The students with mugs priced them higher. b)The students with no mugs priced them higher. c)Both sets of students priced them about the same Students in every other seat were given university mugs. Then reported how much they would be willing to sell the mug for.

Students with the mugs were willing to sell them, on average, for $4.50 Students with no mugs were willing to buy them, on average, for $2.25 Kahneman, D. (UC Berkley), Knetsch, J. (Simon Fraser U), Thaler, R. (Cornell), 1990, Experimental tests of the endowment effect and the Coase theorem. Journal of Political Economy, 98(6),

Class B Students given a chocolate bar. At the end, given option to trade for a coffee mug. Class C At the beginning, offered a choice between a chocolate bar or coffee mug. Class A At the beginning, students given a coffee mug. At the end, given option to trade for a bar of Swiss chocolate. ? ? ?

Class B Students given a chocolate bar. At the end, given option to trade for a coffee mug. Class C At the beginning, offered a choice between a chocolate bar or coffee mug. Class A At the beginning, students given a coffee mug. At the end, given option to trade for a bar of Swiss chocolate. ? ? ?

Class B 10% chose coffee mug Class C 59% chose coffee mug Class A 89% chose coffee mug ? ? ? J. Knetsch (Simon Fraser U.), 1989, The endowment effect and evidence of nonreversible indifference curves. American Economic Review, 79,

33 chimpanzees given frozen-juice popsicle or tube of peanut butter (both familiar items) and then an opportunity to trade. Brosnan, S. (Emory), et al (Texas, Vanderbilt), 2007, Endowment effects in chimpanzees. Current Biology, 17, ? ? When initially given peanut butter 89% Chose peanut butter When initially given popsicle 42% Chose peanut butter

Dr. Dan Ariely, Duke University Carmon, Ziv and Dan Ariely (2000), “Focusing on the Forgone: How Value Can Appear So Different to Buyers and Sellers,” Journal of Consumer Research, 27 (December), 360–70.

Duke basketball tickets experiment At Duke, home-game basketball tickets are distributed by lottery Ariely gets a list of the winners and losers Calls the losers and asks how much they’d pay for a ticket ($170 on average) Calls the winners and asks at what price they’d sell ($1,400) This is evidence of the endowment effect

Duke basketball tickets experiment The lottery losers were willing to pay $170 on average for a ticket This means the lottery losers valued a ticket at approximately $ The lottery winners were willing to sell their tickets for $1400 on average This means the lottery winners valued a ticket at approximately $ Why would two randomly chosen groups value the same thing at such different levels?

The endowment effect in art Dr. Dan Gilbert, Harvard University 8:25-13:57

Students in a non-credit photography class at Harvard picked two photos to develop then chose one to keep. Gilbert, D. (Harvard) & Ebert, J. (MIT), 2002, Decisions and revisions: The affective forecasting of changeable outcomes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 82, Group 1 “pick your favorite, … you won’t be able to change your mind.” Group 2 If you change your mind within four days, you can swap it. I’ll call at the end to double-check.

Both before and two days after their choice, participants were asked how much they liked their photograph from 1 (not at all) to 9 (very much) Gilbert, D. (Harvard) & Ebert, J. (MIT), 2002, Decisions and revisions: The affective forecasting of changeable outcomes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 82, Group 1 Change in satisfaction with picture +1.3 Group 2 Change in satisfaction with picture -1.8

Gilbert, D. (Harvard) & Ebert, J. (MIT), 2002, Decisions and revisions: The affective forecasting of changeable outcomes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 82,

Students ranked 6 art posters. Next, allowed to take home either 3 rd or 4 th ranked poster. 15 minutes later, they rated their chosen poster again. Gilbert, D. (Harvard) & Ebert, J. (MIT), 2002, Decisions and revisions: The affective forecasting of changeable outcomes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 82, Group A: “if … any time in the next month, you can just let me know and we will exchange it for you.” Group B: Final choice, no exchanges.

Change in ranking of the art poster before and after they chose to take it home. Gilbert, D. (Harvard) & Ebert, J. (MIT), 2002, Decisions and revisions: The affective forecasting of changeable outcomes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 82, Group A: “if … any time in the next month, you can just let me know and we will exchange it for you.” Group B: Final choice, no exchanges

When allowed to pick their type of choice (changeable or unchangeable), people preferred: Gilbert, D. (Harvard) & Ebert, J. (MIT), 2002, Decisions and revisions: The affective forecasting of changeable outcomes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 82, Group A: “if … any time in the next month, you can just let me know and we will exchange it for you.” Group B: Final choice, no exchanges. 33.7% 66.3%

When asked which type of choice the typical student would prefer, they believed: Gilbert, D. (Harvard) & Ebert, J. (MIT), 2002, Decisions and revisions: The affective forecasting of changeable outcomes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 82, Group A: “if … any time in the next month, you can just let me know and we will exchange it for you.” Group B: Final choice, no exchanges. 15.7% 84.3%

Endowment effect and marketing Money-back guarantees are offered by businesses because it reduces people’s resistance to trying a product Once someone tries the product, the endowment effect may seal the deal

The IKEA effect One’s sense of ownership of something increases when one invests more of one’s resources in it

Virtual Ownership We may feel as though we already own something if we can vividly imagine taking possession of it and living with it This virtual ownership leads to a purchase and to actual ownership Successful advertisements are good at enabling us to vividly imagine life with a product

Endowment Effect in Ideas Once we accept an idea it is very difficult for us to let it go This is how ideological rigidity sets in We find it hard to take evidence seriously when it threatens an idea we feel is ours We only consider evidence when it supports an idea we already believe

Gilbert, D. (Harvard) & Ebert, J. (MIT), 2002, Decisions and revisions: The affective forecasting of changeable outcomes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 82,

Dr. Dan Gilbert, Harvard University 14:19-19:05

Loss Aversion

People are more motivated to avoid a loss than to acquire a similar gain.

Loss Aversion, Measured Daniel Kahneman on loss aversion: 8ZY&feature=related 8ZY&feature=related Experiment after experiment has shown that people will accept a gamble with equal odds of a loss and a gain, as long as the gain is roughly 2.5 times the loss

Loss aversion and endowment effect Once I own something, not having it becomes more painful, because it is a loss. If I don’t yet own it, then acquiring it is less important, because it is a gain.

Loss aversion and framing If the same choice is framed as a loss, rather than as a gain, different decisions will be made.

Imagine that the US is preparing for the outbreak of an unusual disease, which is expected to kill 600 people. Choose a program to address the problem. A: 200 people will be saved B: 1/3 chance that 600 people will be saved. 2/3 chance that no people will be saved.

Imagine that the US is preparing for the outbreak of an unusual disease, which is expected to kill 600 people. Choose a program to address the problem. Tversky, A. & Kahneman, D., 1981, The framing of decisions and the psychology of choice. Science, 211, % A: 200 people will be saved B: 1/3 chance that 600 people will be saved. 2/3 chance that no people will be saved. 28%

22% 78% Tversky, A. & Kahneman, D., 1981, The framing of decisions and the psychology of choice. Science, 211,

Only the framing changed 600 people expected to die… 1/3 chance that nobody will die. 2/3 chance that 600 people will die. 600 people expected to die… 1/3 chance that 600 people will be saved. 2/3 chance that no people will be saved. 78%28% We will take great risks to avoid a loss. Reframing the same option as a loss changes the choices. = Tversky, A. & Kahneman, D., 1981, The framing of decisions and the psychology of choice. Science, 211, ≠

Choose A)A sure gain of $240 B)25% chance to gain $1000, and 75% chance to gain nothing Choose A)A sure loss of $750 B)75% chance to lose $1000, and 25% chance to lose nothing Tversky, A. & Kahneman, D., 1981, The framing of decisions and the psychology of choice. Science, 211, We are less likely to risk to get an extra gain We are more likely to risk to avoid a sure loss

Framing a gamble as a loss or a gain start – 5:54

When an investor sells a losing stock, she is committing to the loss. Does loss aversion cause investors to hold losing stocks longer than winning stocks?

Study: Tracking 10,000 brokerage accounts from including 162,948 trades. In any one year… What share of losing stocks were sold? What share of gaining stocks were sold?

Study: Tracking 10,000 brokerage accounts from including 162,948 trades. In any one year… What share of losing stocks were sold? What share of gaining stocks were sold? Odean, T. (UC-Davis), 1998, Are investors reluctant to realize their losses? Journal of Finance, 53, Note the strong opposing tax incentives

Would investors have been better off to hold the winners and sell the losers? Average 252-day gain after winners sold Average 252-day gain after other stocks sold, but losing stocks held

Would investors have been better off to hold the winners and sell the losers? Average 252-day gain after winners sold Average 252-day gain after other stocks sold, but losing stocks held +2.35% (better than market) -1.06% (worse than market) Odean, T. (UC-Davis), 1998, Are investors reluctant to realize their losses? Journal of Finance, 53,

Why losses hurt more Is there a conflict between the core “elephant” side of the brain and the rational pre-frontal cortex “rider”. Why? GQLO_iXKlUhttp:// GQLO_iXKlU 3:06-end

Using prospect theory to pursue your goals 1.Make it a habit (status quo bias) 2.Own it (endowment effect) 3.Fear its loss (loss aversion)

2. Own it Ownership creates satisfaction (endowment effect). By completely identifying yourself with a future goal, you become more attached to it I claim my future

3. Fear its loss By “owning” a future goal, immediate temptations which put that future at risk can be framed as a potential loss.

Application question Suppose you are advising a friend who wants to become a surgeon. What practical suggestions can you give to help her “own” her identity as a future surgeon?