Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
https://repository.iimb.ac.in/handle/2074/11171
Title: | A satisficing approach to eliciting risk preferences | Authors: | Prakhya, Srinivas Ranganathan, Kavitha Berg, Nathan |
Keywords: | Elicitation;Herbert Simon;Portfolio Choice;Risk Preference;Satisficing;Simple Rules That Make Us Smart;Simplicity | Issue Date: | 2018 | Publisher: | Elsevier | Abstract: | A new approach is proposed to eliciting risk preferences by framing choice over risky payoff distributions as a satisficing task. We demonstrate novel links between the information elicited from the satisficing task—which allows subjects to consider accepting a worse worst-case outcome in favor of a better best-case outcome—and portfolio choice using expected utility theory (EUT). The key tradeoff in our satisficing task can also be stated in reverse: to consider accepting less attractive potential upside gains in order to improve worst-case outcomes. Risk preferences are elicited by asking subjects to choose an acceptable worst-case portfolio outcome from a continuum of binary gambles, each with its own support and unique minimum. The worst-case aspiration represents the smallest low-state payoff in the binary gamble that the subject is willing to accept. We show analytically and empirically that choosing a most preferred worst-case aspiration maps into a logically equivalent—but psychologically distinct—process of expected utility maximization (i.e., allocating one's savings over a binary risky asset and risk-free bond using the EUT framework with a unique risk-acceptance parameter under CARA or CRRA risk preferences). | URI: | https://repository.iimb.ac.in/handle/2074/11171 | ISSN: | 0148-2963 | DOI: | 10.1016/J.JBUSRES.2017.08.029 |
Appears in Collections: | 2010-2019 |
Show full item record
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.