Individuals' risk preferences are estimated and employed in a variety of settings, notably including choices in financial, labor, and product markets. Recent work, especially in financial economics, provides estimates of individuals' coefficients of relative risk aversion (CRRA's) in excess of one, and often significantly higher. However, it can be shown that high CRRA's imply equally high values for the income elasticity of the value of a statistical life. Yet estimates of this elasticity, derived from labor and product markets, are in the range of 0.5 to 0.6. Furthermore, it turns out that even a CRRA below one is difficult to reconcile with these elasticity estimates. Thus, there appears to be an important (additional) anomaly involving ...
We use household survey data to construct a direct measure of absolute risk aversion based on the ma...
Estimates of the value of a statistical life (VSL) establish the price government agencies use to va...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...
Individuals’ risk preferences are estimated and employed in a variety of settings, notably including...
Article published in a journal of theoretical and empirical papers that analyze risk-bearing behavio...
Measuring risk aversion is sensitive to assumptions about the wealth in subjects’ utility functions....
Most classical tests of constant relative risk aversion (CRRA) based on individual portfolio composi...
The value of a change in mortality risk is conventionally described by the marginal rate of substitu...
Efforts to reconcile inconsistencies between theory and estimates of the income elasticity of the va...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...
This paper considers the factors responsible for differences with age in estimates of the wage compe...
We use household survey data to construct a direct measure of absolute risk aversion based on the ma...
Article published in a journal of theoretical and empirical papers that analyze risk-bearing behavio...
This paper shows that existing evidence on labor supply behavior places an upper bound on risk avers...
Most classical tests of constant relative risk aversion (CRRA) based on individual portfolio composi...
We use household survey data to construct a direct measure of absolute risk aversion based on the ma...
Estimates of the value of a statistical life (VSL) establish the price government agencies use to va...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...
Individuals’ risk preferences are estimated and employed in a variety of settings, notably including...
Article published in a journal of theoretical and empirical papers that analyze risk-bearing behavio...
Measuring risk aversion is sensitive to assumptions about the wealth in subjects’ utility functions....
Most classical tests of constant relative risk aversion (CRRA) based on individual portfolio composi...
The value of a change in mortality risk is conventionally described by the marginal rate of substitu...
Efforts to reconcile inconsistencies between theory and estimates of the income elasticity of the va...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...
This paper considers the factors responsible for differences with age in estimates of the wage compe...
We use household survey data to construct a direct measure of absolute risk aversion based on the ma...
Article published in a journal of theoretical and empirical papers that analyze risk-bearing behavio...
This paper shows that existing evidence on labor supply behavior places an upper bound on risk avers...
Most classical tests of constant relative risk aversion (CRRA) based on individual portfolio composi...
We use household survey data to construct a direct measure of absolute risk aversion based on the ma...
Estimates of the value of a statistical life (VSL) establish the price government agencies use to va...
It is often asserted that individual willingness to pay to reduce mortality risk is greater among in...