Publication | Open Access
Measuring risk-aversion: The challenge
56
Citations
20
References
2015
Year
Risk-aversion is advanced as a measure of the feeling guiding the person who faces a decision with uncertain outcomes, whether about money or status or happiness or anything else of importance. The concepts of utility and, implicitly, risk-aversion were used first nearly 300 years ago, but risk-aversion was identified as a key dimensionless variable for explaining monetary decisions only in 1964. A single class of utility function with risk-aversion as sole parameter emerges when risk-aversion is regarded as a function of the present wealth, rather than subject to alteration through imagining possible future wealths. The adoption of a single class allows a more direct analysis of decisions, revealing shortcomings in the use of conventional, Taylor series expansions for inferring risk-aversion, over and above the obvious restrictions on perturbation size. Dimensional analysis shows that risk-aversion is a function of three dimensionless variables particular to the decision and a set of dimensionless character traits, identified later as the limiting reluctance to invest and the lower threshold on risk-aversion. The theoretical framework presented allows measurement of risk-aversion, paving the way for direct, evidencebased utility calculations.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
1979 | 45.8K | |
1970 | 6.3K | |
1964 | 4.9K | |
1976 | 4.7K | |
1957 | 3.6K | |
1914 | 3.4K | |
1954 | 2.7K | |
1935 | 1.1K | |
2006 | 967 | |
1971 | 710 |
Page 1
Page 1