是什么让抑郁症婴儿与众不同?期望还是偏好?

IF 4.3 2区 经济学 Q1 BUSINESS, FINANCE
Tomás Lejarraga , Jan K. Woike , Ralph Hertwig
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引用次数: 0

摘要

研究发现,经历过金融危机的人在今后的生活中承担的金融风险较少。是什么导致了这种行为?是 "抑郁症宝宝 "变得更加厌恶风险,还是他们对未来的市场回报更加悲观?为了找出答案,我们操纵了实验投资者了解危机的方式--亲身经历危机或从图表中了解危机--并考察了他们随后承担金融风险的倾向。此外,投资者还通过对市场未来价值的预测来揭示他们对市场的预期。我们的研究结果复制了抑郁婴儿效应:总的来说,经历过实验性金融冲击的人比从象征性描述中了解到金融冲击的人承担的金融风险更小。重要的是,这些行为的总体变化并没有伴随着预期或风险偏好的明显变化。虽然我们没有观察到风险承担与信念或偏好的同步变化之间存在明确的因果关系,但线性模型表明,实验中的风险承担与激发的风险偏好有显著关系,但与激发的预期没有关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
What makes depression babies different: Expectations or preferences?
People who have experienced a financial crisis have been found to take less financial risk in their future lives. What causes this behavior? Have “depression babies” become more risk averse or are they more pessimistic about future market returns, that is, a preference or a belief change? To find out, we manipulated how experimental investors learned about a crisis – by experiencing it first-hand or by learning about it from graphs – and examined their subsequent propensity to take financial risk. Investors additionally revealed their expectations about the market by making incentivized predictions about its future value. Our findings replicated the depression-babies effect: On aggregate, people who experienced an experimental financial shock took less financial risk than people who learned about it from a symbolic description. Importantly, these aggregate changes in behavior were not accompanied by discernible changes in expectations or in risk preferences. Although we do not observe a clear causal link between risk taking and concurrent changes in belief or preference, linear models suggest that risk taking in the experiment has a significant relationship with elicited risk preferences but not with elicited expectations.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
13.20
自引率
6.10%
发文量
75
审稿时长
69 days
期刊介绍: Behavioral and Experimental Finance represent lenses and approaches through which we can view financial decision-making. The aim of the journal is to publish high quality research in all fields of finance, where such research is carried out with a behavioral perspective and / or is carried out via experimental methods. It is open to but not limited to papers which cover investigations of biases, the role of various neurological markers in financial decision making, national and organizational culture as it impacts financial decision making, sentiment and asset pricing, the design and implementation of experiments to investigate financial decision making and trading, methodological experiments, and natural experiments. Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Finance welcomes full-length and short letter papers in the area of behavioral finance and experimental finance. The focus is on rapid dissemination of high-impact research in these areas.
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