A large stream of literature found that individuals who experience financial strain are particularly concerned about their present needs-that is, they are more likely to choose smaller immediate payoffs over larger future payoffs. In contrast, some recent findings suggest that financially constrained individuals may be more concerned about future needs instead (e.g., they are relatively more likely to invest in long-lived durables than in short-lived experiences). We propose that the use of traditional intertemporal choice tasks has made prior studies overly sensitive to the myopiainducing effects of financial constraint. These tasks typically offer a choice between receiving a smaller payoff in the present versus a larger payoff in the fut...
A number of models in the literature and several experiments show that a high cognitive load will le...
In this paper, we argue that time-inconsistent preferences in financial decision-making are sensitiv...
Why do some people live for the present, whereas others save for the future? The evolutionary framew...
A large stream of literature found that individuals who experience financial strain are particularly...
Individuals exposed to deprivation tend to show a characteristic behavioural syndrome suggestive of ...
A large literature in psychology studies the effects of the immediate decision environment on behavi...
International audienceA large literature in psychology studies the effects of the immediate decision...
When it comes to trading time for money (or vice versa), people tend to be impatient and myopic. Oft...
Decisions made by individuals planning for retirement may be myopic. One way of capturing this myopi...
Humans frequently need to allocate resources across multiple time-steps. Economic theory proposes th...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of Human Ecology-Personal Financial PlanningMaurice MacDonaldClifford...
People make many decisions with consequences that are delayed, rather than immediate. Of particular ...
This dissertation consists of three essays that contribute to the field of behavioral economics by u...
Individuals often show time-inconsistent preferences when making intertemporal choices for monetary ...
A number of models in the literature and several experiments show that a high cognitive load will le...
In this paper, we argue that time-inconsistent preferences in financial decision-making are sensitiv...
Why do some people live for the present, whereas others save for the future? The evolutionary framew...
A large stream of literature found that individuals who experience financial strain are particularly...
Individuals exposed to deprivation tend to show a characteristic behavioural syndrome suggestive of ...
A large literature in psychology studies the effects of the immediate decision environment on behavi...
International audienceA large literature in psychology studies the effects of the immediate decision...
When it comes to trading time for money (or vice versa), people tend to be impatient and myopic. Oft...
Decisions made by individuals planning for retirement may be myopic. One way of capturing this myopi...
Humans frequently need to allocate resources across multiple time-steps. Economic theory proposes th...
Doctor of PhilosophyDepartment of Human Ecology-Personal Financial PlanningMaurice MacDonaldClifford...
People make many decisions with consequences that are delayed, rather than immediate. Of particular ...
This dissertation consists of three essays that contribute to the field of behavioral economics by u...
Individuals often show time-inconsistent preferences when making intertemporal choices for monetary ...
A number of models in the literature and several experiments show that a high cognitive load will le...
In this paper, we argue that time-inconsistent preferences in financial decision-making are sensitiv...
Why do some people live for the present, whereas others save for the future? The evolutionary framew...