Publication | Closed Access
Comment on “Risk Preferences Are Not Time Preferences”: Separating Risk and Time Preference
67
Citations
27
References
2015
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingChoice TheoryRevealed PreferenceIndividual Decision MakingPsychologyUtility FunctionsObserved Choice BehaviorRisk AttitudeChoice ModelExperimental Decision MakingRisk ManagementManagementExperimental EconomicsChoice-process DataTime PreferenceDecision TheoryEconomicsBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceTime Preferences ”Time PreferencesExperimental PsychologyBehavioral EconomicsUtility TheoryBusinessRisk Analysis (Business)Decision ScienceSeparating RiskRisk Decisions
Andreoni and Sprenger (2012a,b) observe that utility functions are distinct for risk and time preferences, and show that their findings are consistent with a preference for certainty. We revisit this question in an enriched experimental setting in which subjects make intertemporal decisions under different risk conditions. The observed choice behavior supports a separation between risk attitude and intertemporal substitution rather than a preference for certainty. We further show that several models, including Epstein and Zin (1989); Chew and Epstein (1990); and Halevy (2008) exhibit such a separation and can account for the overall experimental findings. (JEL C91, D81, D91)
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