Search results for "Behavioral economics"

showing 10 items of 28 documents

Another "French paradox": explaining why interest rates to microenterprises dit not increase with the change in French usury legislation

2015

Conventional wisdom indicates that the growth of credit may not materialize if credit rates remain capped by usury laws, as had long been the case in France. France therefore abolished usury ceilings on loans to microenterprise in an effort to increase financing for microentrepreneurs. This should have led to an increase in interest rates and increase in microcredit. However, we do not find any increase in interest rates and this is therefore a paradox. The paper provides a brief literature review and the salient features of the legislative changes in France. It follows this up with a presentation of interest rate movements. The discussion of possible explanations of the paradox includes cl…

060106 history of social sciencesMonetary economicsBehavioral economicslaw.inventionUsuryInformation asymmetry[ QFIN ] Quantitative Finance [q-fin]JEL: G - Financial Economics/G.G2 - Financial Institutions and Services/G.G2.G21 - Banks • Depository Institutions • Micro Finance Institutions • Mortgages[SHS.DROIT]Humanities and Social Sciences/LawlawEconomicsInstitutional analysis0601 history and archaeologyJEL : B - History of Economic Thought Methodology and Heterodox Approaches/B.B5 - Current Heterodox Approaches/B.B5.B59 - Other050207 economicsmedia_commonusury050208 finance[QFIN]Quantitative Finance [q-fin]Limited liability05 social sciences1. No povertybehavioural finance06 humanities and the artsJEL: B - History of Economic Thought Methodology and Heterodox Approaches/B.B5 - Current Heterodox Approaches/B.B5.B52 - Institutional • EvolutionaryInterest rateJEL : K - Law and Economics/K.K0 - General/K.K0.K00 - General8. Economic growth[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administrationJEL: B - History of Economic Thought Methodology and Heterodox Approaches/B.B5 - Current Heterodox Approaches/B.B5.B59 - OtherJEL: E - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics/E.E4 - Money and Interest RatesEconomics and Econometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectMoney supplyLegislationBasel IIConventional wisdom[ SHS.DROIT ] Humanities and Social Sciences/LawJEL : E - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics/E.E4 - Money and Interest Rates0502 economics and businessBusiness and International Management[ SHS.GESTION ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administrationFinanceMicrofinancebusiness.industryJEL : G - Financial Economics/G.G2 - Financial Institutions and Services/G.G2.G21 - Banks • Depository Institutions • Micro Finance Institutions • MortgagesJEL : B - History of Economic Thought Methodology and Heterodox Approaches/B.B5 - Current Heterodox Approaches/B.B5.B52 - Institutional • Evolutionarylaw and economicsinstitutional analysismicrofinancemicrocreditJEL: K - Law and Economics/K.K0 - General/K.K0.K00 - GeneralbusinessLawinterest rate
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Adherence

2016

Non-adherence to medical advice is a serious problem to patients, health policy and practitioners. This article outlines concepts of behavioral economics that might lead a patient to decide against the provider's recommendations and thus to be non-adherent. Especially the timing of pay-offs and dynamic inconsistency, their uncertainty and ambiguity aversion, loss-aversion and numerous heuristics like the peak-end-rule are discussed. The paper concludes with some hints on “libertarian” paternalism that may improve the situation.

Actuarial scienceMedical adviceEconomicsAmbiguity aversionDynamic inconsistencyHeuristicsBehavioral economicsHealth policyPaternalismInternational Journal of Applied Behavioral Economics
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Portfolio performance evaluation with loss aversion

2011

In this paper we consider a loss-averse investor equipped with a specific, but still quite general, utility function motivated by behavioral finance. We show that, under certain concrete assumptions concerning the form of this utility, one can derive closed-form solutions for the investor's portfolio performance measure. We investigate the effects of loss aversion and demonstrate its important role in performance measurement. The framework presented in this paper also provides a sound theoretical foundation for all known performance measures based on partial moments of the distribution.

Actuarial sciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectDecision theoryBehavioral economicsMeasure (mathematics)Spectral risk measureLoss aversionEconometricsEconomicsPortfolioPerformance measurementFunction (engineering)General Economics Econometrics and FinanceFinancemedia_commonQuantitative Finance
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The effects of personality, risk and other-regarding attitudes on trust and reciprocity

2022

Abstract This paper reports experimental results on the determinants of trust and reciprocity in the context of a genuinely sequential, binary Trust Game. Apart from behavior in the main experiment, subjects’ risk attitudes and inequality aversion are elicited, as well as the traits of neuroticism and agreeableness, captured through the five-factor model. The findings suggest that trustors’ (first movers) behavior is affected by their loss aversion, while trustees’ (second movers) reciprocal behavior is not explained by any of their other-regarding attitudes, but, rather, by their agreeableness.

AgreeablenessEconomics and Econometricsinequality attitudemedia_common.quotation_subjectGeneral Social Sciencesbehavioral economicstrustContext (language use)NeuroticismDictator gamepersonalityReciprocity (social psychology)Loss aversionrisk attitudeD91PersonalityC9PsychologySocial psychologyApplied PsychologyInequity aversionmedia_commonJournal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics
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Interfirm Network Analysis in Marginal Tourist Destinations: The Mediator Company in Business Relationships

2022

The literature on tourist destinations and the use of empirical approaches evidence the need to adopt this model to increase tourism economies. In model application, the enterprises, and local stakeholders, sometimes represent limitations or opportunities. This article opens the view to tourist destination networks, described as relational structures that can influence and determine the destination-building process. The Network Analysis methodology offers a better understanding of inter-firm relational dynamics when applied in a small context, and in this case, the application was undertaken on the island of Sicily, in Menfi town and its hinterland. Findings show the presence of a company t…

Behavioral Economicstourism destinationEconomicscooperationSettore SECS-P/06 - Economia Applicatanetwork analysisdevelopmentnetwork analysis tourism destination cooperation development tourism enterprisestourism enterprisesTourism
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Long-term ecology of investors in a financial market

2018

AbstractThe cornerstone of modern finance is the efficient market hypothesis. Under this hypothesis all information available about a financial asset is immediately incorporated into its price dynamics by fully rational investors. In contrast to this hypothesis many studies have pointed out behavioral biases in investors. Recently it has become possible to access databases that track the trading decisions of investors. Studies of such databases have shown that investors acting in a financial market are highly heterogeneous among them, and that heterogeneity is a common characteristic of many financial markets. The article describes an empirical study of the daily trading decisions of all Fi…

Ecology Financial market.050208 financeEcologyInvestment strategyFinancial assetGeneral Arts and Humanities05 social sciencesFinancial marketGeneral Social SciencesBehavioral economicsSettore FIS/07 - Fisica Applicata(Beni Culturali Ambientali Biol.e Medicin)Efficient-market hypothesislcsh:Social Scienceslcsh:HAdaptive market hypothesis0502 economics and businessInvestment styleBusiness050207 economicsEmpirical evidenceGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceGeneral Psychology
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Do Carbon Traders Behave as a Herd?

2017

Abstract This paper shows the existence of herding behavior in the European Carbon Futures Market and studies its possible causes and consequences. This market is characterized by leading the carbon price discovery process and by being highly dominated by professional traders. Both features make it an appropriate environment for the existence of herding. A patterns analysis indicates that the herding level increases in speculative periods, on those days on which the price and size clustering effect is stronger, and with the arrival of carbon-related news. Regarding possible market drivers, we find that herding behavior is positively related with the number of trades, the intraday volatility…

Economics and Econometrics050208 financeFinancial economicsanimal diseases05 social sciencesPattern analysisFutures marketBehavioral economicsCarbon priceOrder (exchange)0502 economics and businessEconomicsHerdHerding050207 economicsVolatility (finance)SpeculationHerd behaviorFutures contracthealth care economics and organizationsFinanceSSRN Electronic Journal
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Noise traders and smart money: Evidence from online searches

2019

International audience; Traditional finance theory considers that the impact of noise traders' attention on asset prices is offset by attention from smart investors. This paper uses online search data to study the influence of noise traders and smart investors on stock returns and volatility. Adopting an original approach, we construct a proxy for smart investor attention based on investors' online search behavior provided by Wikipedia Page Traffic. We combine this new measure with a standard measure of noise traders' attention as proxied by Google Search Volume Index. We show for a sample of 87 French firms over the period 2008–2018 that only noise traders' attention influences stock retur…

Economics and Econometrics050208 financeOffset (computer science)Financial economics05 social sciencesBehavioral economicsStandard measure[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceSmart investorsBehavioral financeNoise tradersOnline search0502 economics and businessEconomicsComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDSOCIETYPrice pressure hypothesis[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration050207 economicsVolatility (finance)Attention measuresStock (geology)
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Why is equity order flow so persistent?

2015

Abstract Order flow in equity markets is remarkably persistent in the sense that order signs (to buy or sell) are positively autocorrelated out to time lags of tens of thousands of orders, corresponding to many days. Two possible explanations are herding, corresponding to positive correlation in the behavior of different investors, or order splitting, corresponding to positive autocorrelation in the behavior of single investors. We investigate this using order flow data from the London Stock Exchange for which we have membership identifiers. By formulating models for herding and order splitting, as well as models for brokerage choice, we are able to overcome the distortion introduced by bro…

Economics and EconometricsControl and OptimizationMarket microstructureApplied MathematicsPrice impactAutocorrelationEquity (finance)Market microstructureHerdingBehavioral economicsPositive correlationOrder flowMicroeconomicsOrder splittingStock exchangeBehavioral financeEconomicsEconometricsHerding
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Understanding Actual Socio-Economic Behavior as a Source of Competitive Advantage

2015

This chapter illustrates the potentiality of the application of experimental-behavioral methods to gain global competitive advantages based in the anticipated measurement of how consumers and citizens would behave when exposed to specific innovation actions to be implemented by an organization. To this end, the chapter presents a brief background of the experimental-behavioral economics approach as an application of the experimental-scientific paradigm to study socio-economic behavior, highlighting its main differential features (use of economic monetary incentives, non-deception, and anonymity). After a discussion of the internal and external validity of this methodology and its ethical im…

EconomicsBehavioral economicsCompetitive advantageIndustrial organization
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