Macroeconomics has paid profound attention to policy studies over the last decades. My PhD thesis discusses how to assess scal policy over the business cycle in unconventional but justifiable environments - either with nonstandard preferences or with less-studied idiosyncratic risks. Chapter 1 justifies policy interventions with exotic preferences. I study a production economy with preferences featuring loss aversion, a core concept commonly accepted in behavioral economics. The representative household obtains utility directly from fluctuations of asset returns, in addition to consumption. I ask whether loss aversion affects equilibrium conditions, whether equilibrium is efficient, and what Ramsey optimal fiscal policy is. I show an...