International audienceWe investigate the effects of health and life expectancy on tolerance of financial risk. Using a standard life-cycle model, we find that the effects of health and life expectancy on preferences over lifetime-income risk are theoretically ambiguous. However, risk tolerance is independent of health and life expectancy when utility takes one of the standard (harmonic absolute risk aversion) functional forms or when optimal consumption is constant over time. Our empirical results, using data from a stated-preference survey (n=2,795), suggest that financial risk tolerance is positively associated with both health and life expectancy; hence utility is not consistent with standard functional forms
Individuals’ monetary values of decreases in mortality risk depend on the magnitude and timing of th...
We analyze a large database of psychometrically derived financial risk tolerance scores (RTS) and as...
Past empirical work suggests that aging is associated with decreases in risk taking. But are such ef...
International audienceWe investigate the effects of health and life expectancy on tolerance of finan...
We investigate the effects of health and life expectancy on aversion to financial risks. In the firs...
We investigate the effects of health and life expectancy on tolerance of financial risks. In the fir...
The standard model of intertemporal choice assumes risk neutrality towards the length of life: under...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...
Life-cycle choices and outcomes over financial (e.g., savings, portfolio, work) and health-related v...
International audienceThe interest in multivariate and higher-order risk preferences has increased. ...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...
This paper introduces a life-cycle model where impatience, instead of being driven by an exogenous d...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...
Academics are divided as to whether risk tolerance is a genetic and enduring personality trait and a...
The construct of the healthy-years equivalent (HYE) has been proposed as an alternative to the quali...
Individuals’ monetary values of decreases in mortality risk depend on the magnitude and timing of th...
We analyze a large database of psychometrically derived financial risk tolerance scores (RTS) and as...
Past empirical work suggests that aging is associated with decreases in risk taking. But are such ef...
International audienceWe investigate the effects of health and life expectancy on tolerance of finan...
We investigate the effects of health and life expectancy on aversion to financial risks. In the firs...
We investigate the effects of health and life expectancy on tolerance of financial risks. In the fir...
The standard model of intertemporal choice assumes risk neutrality towards the length of life: under...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...
Life-cycle choices and outcomes over financial (e.g., savings, portfolio, work) and health-related v...
International audienceThe interest in multivariate and higher-order risk preferences has increased. ...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...
This paper introduces a life-cycle model where impatience, instead of being driven by an exogenous d...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...
Academics are divided as to whether risk tolerance is a genetic and enduring personality trait and a...
The construct of the healthy-years equivalent (HYE) has been proposed as an alternative to the quali...
Individuals’ monetary values of decreases in mortality risk depend on the magnitude and timing of th...
We analyze a large database of psychometrically derived financial risk tolerance scores (RTS) and as...
Past empirical work suggests that aging is associated with decreases in risk taking. But are such ef...