当交易者采取战略行动时,禀赋效应是否占上风?

Stephan Tontrup
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摘要

交易不仅仅是个人对自己财产的估价。交易者试图预测潜在买家想要出售的商品的WTP。他们不关注权利对他们的价值,他们的个人估值只是保留价。该法案之所以分析禀赋效应,是因为它想保护贸易收益;相比之下,大多数经济学和心理学的禀赋效应研究关注的是一个不同的问题:它们测试偏好形成理论;与交易行为不同,它们将参与者的重点放在证明估值取决于所有权和预期的权利上。我们在这项研究中表明,将受试者的注意力集中在他们的善行上的实验设计会提高禀赋效应的规模,并可能误导法律辩论。我们的实验为受试者提供了策略行为的激励。作为典型的交易,如果参与者要求的价格超过他们对自己所拥有的商品的个人估价,他们可以赚得更多。这些激励措施将受试者的注意力转移到买方的潜在WTP上。研究结果表明,认知上更复杂的交易任务削弱了所有者对其权利的占用,显著降低了所有者的损失厌恶情绪。我们的发现应该适用于大多数商业交易,因为战略行为在专业关系中非常常见。该研究表明,“禀赋效应”在真实市场中的作用可能没有人们通常认为的那么突出,私人订购可能很少需要法律保护。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Does the Endowment Effect Prevail When Traders Act Strategically?
Trading is more than a personal valuation of own property. Traders try to anticipate the WTP potential buyers have for the good they want to sell. They do not focus on the value the entitlement has for them, their personal valuation is only a reservation price. The law analyzes the Endowment Effect because it wants to protect gains from trade; most economic and psychological Endowment Effect studies by contrast are concerned with a different question: They test theories of preference formation; unlike in trading behavior they focus the participants on their entitlement to demonstrate that valuation depends on ownership and expectations. We show in this study that an experimental design that focuses the subjects' attention on their good elevates the size of the Endowment Effect and can mislead the legal debate. Our experiment provides the subjects with incentives for strategic behavior. As typical for trading, the participants can earn more if they ask for a price that exceeds their personal valuation of the good they are endowed with. The incentives shift the attention of the subjects to the potential WTP of the buyer. The results we find show that the cognitively more complex trading task weakens the owners' occupation with their entitlement and significantly decreases their loss aversion. Our findings should apply to most business transactions, as strategic behavior is very common in professional relationships. The study suggests that the Endowment Effect is likely less prominent in real markets than often suggested and that private ordering may seldom need legal protection against it.
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