Social Transmission of Financial Decision Making Skills. A Case of the Blind Leading the Blind?

Sandro Ambuehl, B. Bernheim, Fulya Y. Ersoy, Donna Harris
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Previous research shows that many people seek financial advice from non-experts, and that peer interactions influence financial decisions. We investigate whether such influences are beneficial, harmful, or simply haphazard. In our laboratory experiment, face-to-face commu- nication with a randomly assigned peer significantly improves the quality of private decisions, measured by subjects’ ability to choose as if they properly understand their opportunity sets. Subjects do not merely mimic those who know better, but also make better private decisions in novel tasks. People with low financial competence experience greater improvements when their partners also exhibit low financial competence. Hence, peer-to-peer communication transmits financial decision making skills most effectively when peers are equally uninformed, rather than when an informed decision maker teaches an uninformed peer. Qualitative analysis of subjects’ discussions supports this interpretation. The provision of effective financial education to one member of a pair influences the nature of communication but but does not lead to additional improvements in the quality of the untreated partner’s decisions, particularly in novel tasks.
金融决策技能的社会传递。盲人给盲人引路?
先前的研究表明,许多人从非专家那里寻求财务建议,而同伴之间的互动会影响财务决策。我们调查这些影响是有益的,有害的,还是只是偶然的。在我们的实验室实验中,与随机分配的同伴面对面交流显著提高了私人决策的质量,这是通过受试者的选择能力来衡量的,就好像他们正确地理解了他们的机会集。实验对象不仅模仿那些懂得更多的人,而且在新任务中也能做出更好的个人决定。当他们的伴侣也表现出较低的财务能力时,财务能力较低的人会有更大的改善。因此,点对点交流最有效地传递金融决策技能的时候,是同伴们同样不知情的时候,而不是一个知情的决策者教一个不知情的同伴的时候。对受试者讨论的定性分析支持这一解释。向一对中的一个成员提供有效的财务教育会影响沟通的性质,但不会导致未经治疗的伙伴决策质量的进一步改善,特别是在新任务中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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