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Are Risk Preferences Stable?
by
Schildberg-Hörisch, Hannah
in
Age
/ Changes
/ Economic crisis
/ Economic models
/ Economic stabilization
/ Economic theory
/ Emotions
/ Empirical evidence
/ Financial risk
/ Investment risk
/ Life cycles
/ Microeconomics
/ Panel data
/ Personality
/ Personality traits
/ Preferences
/ Psychological stress
/ Psychology
/ Risk
/ Risk aversion
/ Risk aversion preference
/ Risk in Economics and Psychology
/ Risk preferences
/ Self control
/ Stability
/ Time
2018
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Are Risk Preferences Stable?
by
Schildberg-Hörisch, Hannah
in
Age
/ Changes
/ Economic crisis
/ Economic models
/ Economic stabilization
/ Economic theory
/ Emotions
/ Empirical evidence
/ Financial risk
/ Investment risk
/ Life cycles
/ Microeconomics
/ Panel data
/ Personality
/ Personality traits
/ Preferences
/ Psychological stress
/ Psychology
/ Risk
/ Risk aversion
/ Risk aversion preference
/ Risk in Economics and Psychology
/ Risk preferences
/ Self control
/ Stability
/ Time
2018
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Do you wish to request the book?
Are Risk Preferences Stable?
by
Schildberg-Hörisch, Hannah
in
Age
/ Changes
/ Economic crisis
/ Economic models
/ Economic stabilization
/ Economic theory
/ Emotions
/ Empirical evidence
/ Financial risk
/ Investment risk
/ Life cycles
/ Microeconomics
/ Panel data
/ Personality
/ Personality traits
/ Preferences
/ Psychological stress
/ Psychology
/ Risk
/ Risk aversion
/ Risk aversion preference
/ Risk in Economics and Psychology
/ Risk preferences
/ Self control
/ Stability
/ Time
2018
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Journal Article
Are Risk Preferences Stable?
2018
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Overview
It is ultimately an empirical question whether risk preferences are stable over time. The evidence comes from diverse strands of literature, covering the stability of risk preferences in panel data over shorter periods of time, life-cycle dynamics in risk preferences, the possibly long-lasting effects of exogenous shocks on risk preferences as well as temporary variations in risk preferences. Individual risk preferences appear to be persistent and moderately stable over time, but their degree of stability is too low to be reconciled with the assumption of perfect stability in neoclassical economic theory. We offer an alternative conceptual framework for preference stability that builds on research regarding the stability of personality traits in psychology. The definition of stability used in psychology implies high levels of rank-order stability across individuals and not that the individual will maintain the same level of a trait over time. Preference parameters are considered as distributions with a mean that is significantly but less than perfectly stable, plus some systematic variance. This framework accommodates evidence on systematic changes in risk preferences over the life cycle, due to exogenous shocks such as economic crises or natural catastrophes, and due to temporary changes in self-control resources, emotions, or stress. We note that research on the stability of (risk) preferences is conceptually at the heart of microeconomics and systematic changes in risk preferences have vital real-world consequences.
Publisher
American Economic Association
Subject
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