Title: Human Nature and Economics
1Human Nature and Economics
2Good and Bad
- Write a list of 5 behaviors characteristic of a
good person - Write list of 5 behaviors characteristic of a bad
person
3Why Study Human Nature?
- To what extent are desirable ends constrained by
human nature? - Is insatiability a human characteristic?
- Biophilia have humans evolved to value nature?
- Social animalsis fairness a desirable end? Do we
care about others for their sake, not our own? - Discounting
4Why Study Human Nature?
- To what extent are allocative mechanisms
constrained by human nature? - Are we inherently competitive, cooperative, or
both? - Are we rational, emotional, or both?
- Are people the same everywhere?
5Will Competition or Cooperation Solve Societys
Current Crises?
- Global Climate Change (finite waste sinks, finite
services) - Natural resource depletion/biodiversity loss
(finite raw material sources, finite services) - Peak Oil (finite energy sources)
- Threat of global pandemics
- Benefits non-rival and/or non-excludable
- Solutions demand cooperation
- Counter examples?
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10What is the conventional economic model of human
nature?
- Homo-economicus
- Self-interested
- Insatiable
- Rational
- Competitive
- Is this closer to your depiction of a good person
or a bad person?
11Market Economics Driven by Competition
- Assumes humans insatiable, always act in rational
self interest, do not care what happens to others - Must design a system that leads to greatest good
for greatest number - Rewards greed and selfish behavior
- Invisible hand
- Virtue of Selfishness
- How do we test market theory?
12How do we test these assumptions?
- Study history
- Game theory and games
- Experimental economics
- Neuro-economics
- Psychology and economics
- Evolutionary biology
13Are People Insatiable?
14Evidence from history, evolution and behavioral
economics
- Hunter-gatherer economies
- Absolute vs. relative wealth
- Widow birds
- Status treadmill
- Alternative forms of status
15Human Needs
- Market goods only one of many human needs
- Needs consistent across time and cultures
- How we satisfy them differs
- Satiation occurs
- Pseudo-satisfiers
16Are People Rational?
17Split into two groups. Group 2 leave room
18Group 1
- Serious flu will kill 6000 people
- Choice A Conventional vaccine will save 2000
people - Choice B Experimental vaccine has 1/3 chance of
saving everyone, 2/3 chance of saving no one - Mark your choice and leave room
19Group 2
- Serious flu will kill 6000 people
- Choice A Conventional vaccine will result in
death of 4000 people - Choice B Experimental vaccine has 1/3 chance of
saving everyone, 2/3 chance of saving no one - Mark your choice
20Are People Rational or Emotional?
- Out of control trolley
- Losses vs. gains
- WTP vs. WTA
- Is perfect rationality possible in a complex
world?
21Do people care about the future?
22What are our attitudes towards the future?
Discounting
- Would you rather have 10 today, or 12 in one
month? - The discount rate
- Opportunity costs and investments
- Pure time preference
- Uncertainty
- Richer future
- ?(Bt-Ct)(1r)-t
- What happens in your brain when you discount?
- Who discounts the most?
23How do we Discount?
- Hyperbolic discounting
- Would you prefer 10 in 5 years, or 12 in 5
years and one month? - Social discount rates
- Discounting the distant future
- What happens in our brains when we discount?
- Should we discount?
24Are we Purely Self-interested?
- Game theory and experimental economics
- Ultimatum game
- Dictatorship game
- Public goods game
25Or do we care about others?
- H. comunicus, concern for fairness and
community preferences - H. naturalis, concern for sustainability and
whole system preferences
26Are we Competitive or Cooperative? Evidence from
Neuroscience and behavioral econ
- Neurotransmitters
- Dopamine
- Oxytocin
- Neuroeconomics and prisoner's dilemma
- Investment game
- Oxytocin and trust
- Altruistic punishment
- Tit for tat
27Evidence From Evolution
- Kin selection Altruism, empathy, reciprocity
evolve ifRB/C gt 1 - C cost of empathic behavior to individual
- Bbenefit to others
- R degree of relatedness
- Group selection vs. individual selection
- Pseudomonas species
- Encompasses kin selection
- Cooperation and energy abundance
- Dictyostelium discoideum (amoeba)
- Myxococcus xanthus (self-organized, predatory,
saprotrophic, single-species biofilm called a
swarm) - In humans, genetic and cultural evolution
interact
28Are People the Same Everywhere?
- Ultimatum game across cultures
29Why Does this Matter?
- Desirable ends
- Humans are satiable
- We have a broad range of needs
- Desired ends are in relationship to what others
have - Allocative mechanisms
- Non-rival resources are best provided through
cooperation, and we are highly adapted to
cooperate - Rival resources may be effectively allocated
through competition - Modeling humans as solely cooperative or solely
competitive is entirely inappropriate