We report experiments investigating how experience influences the endowment effect. Our experiments feature endowments which are bundles of unfamiliar consumption goods. We examine how a subject’s willingness to swap items from their endowment is influenced by prior experiences of tasting the goods in question and by prior experiences of choosing between them. We do not find a statistically significant endowment effect in our baseline treatment and, because of this, we are unable to test for an effect of consumption experience. We do find an endowment effect when the endowment is acquired in two instalments and, in this setting, we find some evidence that choice experience increases trading. In a follow up experiment, we find evidence that ...
The endowment effect occurs when people assign a higher value to an item they own than to the same i...
The endowment effect, which predicts undertrading and a willingness-to-accept greater than willingne...
People often demand a greater price when selling goods that they own than they would pay to purchase...
We report experiments investigating how experience influences the endowment effect. Our experiments ...
The endowment effect, which predicts undertrading and a willingness-to-accept greater than willingne...
The first chapter introduces the thesis and reviews the literature on loss aversion, the endowment e...
International audienceSimple exchange experiments have revealed that participants trade their endowm...
The discrepancy between WTA and WTP is supposed to be a manifestation of the endowment effect (KKT)....
We hypothesise and confirm a previously unnoticed pattern within pre-existing data on the endowment ...
Based on the theoretical frame of prospect theory, this paper investigates consumer decision on two ...
AbstractThe endowment effect is the finding that possession of an item adds to its value. We introdu...
Contrary to theoretical expectations, measures of willingness to accept greatly exceed measures of w...
The “endowment effect” refers to the tendency to place greater value on items that one owns—an anoma...
The disparity between Willingness to Accept (WTA) and Willingness to Pay (WTP) is commonly explained...
A vibrant literature has emerged that suggests willingness to pay and willingness to accept measures...
The endowment effect occurs when people assign a higher value to an item they own than to the same i...
The endowment effect, which predicts undertrading and a willingness-to-accept greater than willingne...
People often demand a greater price when selling goods that they own than they would pay to purchase...
We report experiments investigating how experience influences the endowment effect. Our experiments ...
The endowment effect, which predicts undertrading and a willingness-to-accept greater than willingne...
The first chapter introduces the thesis and reviews the literature on loss aversion, the endowment e...
International audienceSimple exchange experiments have revealed that participants trade their endowm...
The discrepancy between WTA and WTP is supposed to be a manifestation of the endowment effect (KKT)....
We hypothesise and confirm a previously unnoticed pattern within pre-existing data on the endowment ...
Based on the theoretical frame of prospect theory, this paper investigates consumer decision on two ...
AbstractThe endowment effect is the finding that possession of an item adds to its value. We introdu...
Contrary to theoretical expectations, measures of willingness to accept greatly exceed measures of w...
The “endowment effect” refers to the tendency to place greater value on items that one owns—an anoma...
The disparity between Willingness to Accept (WTA) and Willingness to Pay (WTP) is commonly explained...
A vibrant literature has emerged that suggests willingness to pay and willingness to accept measures...
The endowment effect occurs when people assign a higher value to an item they own than to the same i...
The endowment effect, which predicts undertrading and a willingness-to-accept greater than willingne...
People often demand a greater price when selling goods that they own than they would pay to purchase...