An enormous literature documents that willingness to pay (WTP) is less than willingness to accept (WTA) a monetary amount for an object, a phenomenon called the endowment effect. Using data from an incentivized survey of a representative sample of 3,000 U.S. adults, we add one (probably) surprising additional finding: WTA and WTP for a lottery are, at best, slightly correlated. Across all respondents, the correlation is slightly negative. A meta-study of published experiments with university students shows a correlation of around 0.15--0.2, consistent with the correlation in our data for high-IQ respondents. While poorly related to each other, WTA and WTP are closely related to different measures of risk aversion, and relatively stable acro...
We explore different contexts and mechanisms that might promote or alleviate the gender effect in ri...
"Willingness to pay" (WTP) and "willingness to accept" (WTA) measures of welfare change typically di...
We hypothesise and confirm a previously unnoticed pattern within pre-existing data on the endowment ...
An enormous literature documents that willingness to pay (WTP) is less than willingness to accept (W...
An enormous literature documents that willingness to pay (WTP) is less than willingness to accept (W...
none5siAn enormous literature documents that willingness to pay (WTP) is less than willingness to ac...
An enormous literature documents that willingness to pay (WTP) is less than willingness to accept (W...
The disparity between Willingness to Accept (WTA) and Willingness to Pay (WTP) is commonly explained...
Abstract: In this paper we experimentally investigate the disparity between willingness-to-accept (W...
People report much larger willingness to accept (WTA) than willingness to pay (WTP) under a broad ra...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
This paper examines the three major explanations for the disparity between willingness-to-pay (WTP) ...
Gwendolyn C. Morrison (1997) raises a logical point regarding our experimental test of the divergenc...
Many empirical studies have discovered large discrepancies between willingness to pay (WTP) and will...
We explore different contexts and mechanisms that might promote or alleviate the gender effect in ri...
"Willingness to pay" (WTP) and "willingness to accept" (WTA) measures of welfare change typically di...
We hypothesise and confirm a previously unnoticed pattern within pre-existing data on the endowment ...
An enormous literature documents that willingness to pay (WTP) is less than willingness to accept (W...
An enormous literature documents that willingness to pay (WTP) is less than willingness to accept (W...
none5siAn enormous literature documents that willingness to pay (WTP) is less than willingness to ac...
An enormous literature documents that willingness to pay (WTP) is less than willingness to accept (W...
The disparity between Willingness to Accept (WTA) and Willingness to Pay (WTP) is commonly explained...
Abstract: In this paper we experimentally investigate the disparity between willingness-to-accept (W...
People report much larger willingness to accept (WTA) than willingness to pay (WTP) under a broad ra...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
We conduct experiments to explore the possibility that subject misconceptions, as opposed to a parti...
This paper examines the three major explanations for the disparity between willingness-to-pay (WTP) ...
Gwendolyn C. Morrison (1997) raises a logical point regarding our experimental test of the divergenc...
Many empirical studies have discovered large discrepancies between willingness to pay (WTP) and will...
We explore different contexts and mechanisms that might promote or alleviate the gender effect in ri...
"Willingness to pay" (WTP) and "willingness to accept" (WTA) measures of welfare change typically di...
We hypothesise and confirm a previously unnoticed pattern within pre-existing data on the endowment ...