Title: Temptations and Dynamic Consistency
1Temptations and Dynamic Consistency
- Enrica Carbone
- Università di Bari
2Recent development of the literature on
intertemporal choice
- Quasi-Hyperbolic discounting, Laibson(1997)
- Consumers have an higher discount rate between
the present and the next period than between any
two of the subsequent period. - This discount function implies time inconsistency
3Discounting models
- Exponential discounting
- u(ct) d u(ct1) d2 u(ct2) ... dT-t1
u(cT) - (quasi-)Hyperbolic discounting
- u(ct) ß d u(ct1) d2 u(ct2) ... dT-t1
u(cT)
4Investment goods and temptation goods
- An important distinction was made by Read,
Loewenstein and Kalyanaraman (1999) between goods
which are virtues and vices - Stefano Della Vigna and Ulrike Malmendier, (2004)
made the same distinction between investment
goods and leisure goods - Investment goods have current costs and future
benefits relative to the best alternative
activity - Leisure (temptation) goods current benefits and
future costs relative to the best alternative
activity -
5Previous empirical work
- I follow up two experiments by Read et al. (1998
and 1999). - In one experiment they ask people to chose
between instant-win and prize-draw lottery
tickets. - In the other they ask people to chose between
healthy and unhealty snacks.
6Hypothesis
- Naive hyperbolic people should plan according to
the discount factor d, but when they actually
choose they should apply the discount factor ßd.
7Experiment
- To test this hypothesis we created a spot market
and a future market for goods and activities
(some of the goods were temptation goods and some
were investment goods) - Naive quasi-hyperbolic people when they decide
what to buy they discount at a factor ßdltd and
they should choose more temptation goods with
respect to the exponential people, because
comparatively they give less weight to the future
cost and more weight to the present benefit.
8Experiment forward market
- 15 minutes to read the instructions and choose
the activities and the goods. - 3 hours and 45 minuts to consume the goods and
to play the activities previously bought. - The participants could not talk to other
participants during the experiments.
9Experiment spot market
- 15 minutes to read the instructions.
- 3 hours e 45 minutes to consume the goods and to
play the activities they wanted. - The participants could not talk to other
participants during the experiments.
10Goods sold both in the spot market and in the
future market
- Espressino
- Espresso coffee
- Cioccolat Snack
- Focaccia
- Sandwich
- Oransoda
- Lemonsoda
- Chinotto
- Crostini
- Heqalthy salad Insalata
- Fruit
- Yoghurt skimmed
- Crisps
- Cucciolone (icecream)
- Magnum Nuts (icecream)
- Cornetto (icecream)
- Sweets
11Activities sold both in the spot market and in
the future market
- Textbook reading
- Research on the electronic catalogue of the
department - Pectoral muscles exercise device
- Reading Magazines
- Videogames
- Listening music
12Hypotesis tested
- If people are hyperbolic in the spot market, the
temptations goods and activities consumed are
significantly more than in the forward market.
13Steps for analysing the data
- Combine multiple purchases of the same
good/service by the same person - Add quantities together, multiply by cost/unit
- Add missing data
- If someone didnt buy a certain good, add an
observation that has an expenditure equal to 0 - Normalize expenditure with the following formula
- where e is the expenditure on good j.
- Get mean ratings for short term and long term for
each good
14Table1
15Conclusion
- People consume more temptation goods both in the
spot market and in the future market (there is
only a general discount effect).