Publication | Open Access
Present bias for monetary and dietary rewards
26
Citations
55
References
2022
Year
Consumer EconomicsApplied EconomicsBehavioral Decision MakingChoice TheorySelf-control ProblemsAbstract EconomistsSocial SciencesPsychologyFood ChoiceExperimental Decision MakingBiasExperimental EconomicsPresent BiasConsumer ChoiceEconomicsBehavioral SciencesTime PreferencesBehavioral EconomicsBusinessDecision ScienceIncentive Model
Abstract Economists model self-control problems through time-inconsistent preferences. Empirical tests of these preferences largely rely on experimental elicitation using monetary rewards, with several recent studies failing to find present bias for money. In this paper, we compare estimates of present bias for money with estimates for healthy and unhealthy foods. In a within-subjects longitudinal experiment with 697 low-income Chinese high school students, we find strong present bias for both money and food, and that individual measures of present bias are moderately correlated across reward types. Our experimental measures of time preferences over both money and foods predict field behaviors including alcohol consumption and academic performance.
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