Exponential-growth bias (EGB) is the tendency for individuals to partially neglect compounding of exponential growth. We develop a model wherein biased agents misperceive the intertemporal budget constraint, and derive conditions for overconsumption and dynamic inconsistency. We construct an incentivized measure of EGB in a US-representative population and find substantial bias, with approximately one third of subjects estimated as the fully biased type. The magnitude of the bias is negatively associated with asset accumulation, and does not respond to a simple graphical intervention
We assess the degree of consumption smoothing implicit in a calibrated life-cycle version of the sta...
Abstract Exponential growth bias is the tendency to linearize exponential functions. It means that p...
Humans have difficulties grasping the notion of exponential growth and often underestimate the accum...
There is increasing evidence that people underestimate the magnitude of compounding interest. Howeve...
People underestimate long-term growth in savings because they linearise exponential growth – a pheno...
There is considerable variation in retirement savings within income, age, and educational categories...
This paper tests the exponential growth bias of undergraduate students at a top-level university in ...
This paper evaluates the possible benefits and drawbacks of the formal formula learning of compound ...
Exponential growth bias is the phenomenon that humans intuitively underestimate exponential growth. ...
Previous research shows that individuals make systematic errors when judging exponential growth, whi...
People underappreciate how their own behavior and exogenous factors affect their future utility, and...
I argue that the empirical strategies for estimation of the intergenerational elasticity of lifetime...
The paper considers avariety of evidence that casts light on the validity of the life-cycle model of...
In this paper, we investigate the global dynamics of an endogenous growth model with linear technolo...
We analyse the time‐consistent intertemporal behaviour of an individual who discounts the future hyp...
We assess the degree of consumption smoothing implicit in a calibrated life-cycle version of the sta...
Abstract Exponential growth bias is the tendency to linearize exponential functions. It means that p...
Humans have difficulties grasping the notion of exponential growth and often underestimate the accum...
There is increasing evidence that people underestimate the magnitude of compounding interest. Howeve...
People underestimate long-term growth in savings because they linearise exponential growth – a pheno...
There is considerable variation in retirement savings within income, age, and educational categories...
This paper tests the exponential growth bias of undergraduate students at a top-level university in ...
This paper evaluates the possible benefits and drawbacks of the formal formula learning of compound ...
Exponential growth bias is the phenomenon that humans intuitively underestimate exponential growth. ...
Previous research shows that individuals make systematic errors when judging exponential growth, whi...
People underappreciate how their own behavior and exogenous factors affect their future utility, and...
I argue that the empirical strategies for estimation of the intergenerational elasticity of lifetime...
The paper considers avariety of evidence that casts light on the validity of the life-cycle model of...
In this paper, we investigate the global dynamics of an endogenous growth model with linear technolo...
We analyse the time‐consistent intertemporal behaviour of an individual who discounts the future hyp...
We assess the degree of consumption smoothing implicit in a calibrated life-cycle version of the sta...
Abstract Exponential growth bias is the tendency to linearize exponential functions. It means that p...
Humans have difficulties grasping the notion of exponential growth and often underestimate the accum...