Title: Reverse Preference Reversals for Short FrontEnd Delays
1Reverse Preference Reversals for Short Front-End
Delays
- Ayse Öncüler
- INSEAD, France
- (joint work with Serdar Sayman, Koc U., Turkey)
2Time Inconsistency
- Discounted Utility Model (Koopmans, 1960)
- Stationarity in Discounting
- If (x, t)(y, t), then (x, tj)(y, tj)
- A set of experimental evidence on (regular) time
inconsistency, starting with Thaler (1981),
Benzion et al (1989) Individuals prefer the
later-larger reward (LL) at the beginning but
closer to the date, switch to the sooner-smaller
one (SS).
3Time Inconsistency
- (Regular) Time Inconsistency
Prefer LL
Prefer SS
4Time Inconsistency
- Discounted Utility Model (Koopmans, 1960)
- Stationarity in Discounting
- If (x, t)(y, t), then (x, tj)(y, tj)
- A set of experimental evidence on (regular) time
inconsistency, starting with Thaler (1981),
Benzion et al (1989) Individuals prefer the
later-larger reward (LL) at the beginning but
closer to the date, switch to the sooner-smaller
one (SS). - Current study provides evidence on reverse time
inconsistency Individuals aim for the
sooner-smaller reward and over time, they switch
to the later-larger one - Experimental evidence and a possible explanation
5Time Inconsistency
- (Regular) Time Inconsistency
-
- (Reverse) Time Inconsistency
-
present value
present value
LL
SS
SS
LL
time
SS
LL
time
SS
LL
Example Vacation plans of workaholics
Example Dieting, Christmas clubs
6Experimental Design
Hypothetical
Real Payoffs
Loyalty Programs
Study 1
Study 3
Monetary Payoffs
Study 4
Study 2
7Study 1 Hypothetical Loyalty Program
- Aim To check for regular/reverse time
inconsistency - INSEAD, Singapore (n97) and Koc U., Turkey
(n100) - Hypothetical scenarios on retailer loyalty
programs - Local supermarket offers a 10 check if the buyer
makes 100 purchases. Reward is 25 when the
cumulative purchase is 200 - Subjects favorite movie theater offers a free
ticket after 3 movie attendances or 2 free
tickets after 5 attendances - 2 conditions beginning of program, midway
through
8Study 1 Results - INSEAD
Movie
Supermarket
RTI
TI
RTI
TI
Beginning A 10 after 100 B 25 after
200 Midway A 10 today (100
completed) B 25 after 100 more (200 total)
Beginning A 1 ticket after 3 B 2 tickets
after 5 Midway A 1 ticket now (3
completed) B 2 tickets after 2 more (5 total)
9Study 1 Results Koc Uni.
Movie
Supermarket
RTI
TI
RTI
Beginning A 10 after 100 B 25 after
200 Midway A 10 today (100
completed) B 25 after 100 more (200 total)
Beginning A 1 ticket after 3 B 2 tickets
after 5 Midway A 1 ticket now (3
completed) B 2 tickets after 2 more (5 total)
10Study 1- Conclusion
- Overall, no significant time inconsistency in
either direction - Some women exhibited regular TI- becoming more
impatient - for imminent reward
- Men exhibited reverse TI- deferring an imminent
reward - Possible pitfall Effort required for payoff
- Next Choice task between two monetary payoffs
11Study 2 Hypothetical Monetary Outcomes
- Aim to check time inconsistency for choice
task between two monetary outcomes to be received
at different time periods - 2 pairs of outcomes (7-10 and 20-25)
- 4 pairs of time periods
12Study 2 - Results
(Koc U., n1 70, n2 60, btw ss)
preferring to wait
RTI
RTI
RTI
RTI
13Study 2 - Results cont.
(Koc U., n1 70, n2 60, btw ss)
preferring to wait
RTI
RTI
RTI
RTI
14Study 2- Conclusion
- No gender difference
- We observe RTI in almost all cases
- subjects preferring to wait decreases with
delay - Replicated at INSEAD (n67)
- Possible pitfall Not longitudinal
- Next Real payoffs
15Study 3 Real Payoffs, Loyalty Program
- Aim To check for regular/reverse time
inconsistency in an incentive-compatible design - INSEAD, Fontainebleau (n47)
- During the experiment, the campus café offered a
two-level reward program students and staff
could receive 1 croissant after buying 10
croissants, or could receive 2 croissants after
15 croissants. Customers are given a patronage
card which bears an ID number. This card is shown
when they make purchases, and the purchases are
recorded on the card by means of a stamp. - Intended choices are elicited at the beginning
- Purchase and promotion redemption is recorded for
6 weeks
16Study 3 Results (n47, within-ss)
- preferring to wait (B)
- Male Female TOTAL
- A 1 free crois. after 10
- B 2 free crois. after 15 70 25 51
- A 1 free crois after 10 purchased
- B 2 free crois. after 5 more 56 95 72
RTI
RTI
TI
17Study 3- Conclusion
- At the beginning, most men reported preferring
later/larger reward but some switched to
sooner/smaller reward during the experiment
(Regular Time Inconsistency) - At the beginning, most women reported preferring
sooner/smaller reward but they switched to
later/larger reward during the experiment
(Reverse Time Inconsistency) - Overall, there seems to be some evidence on RTI
and TI - 40 RTI
- 19 TI
- 41 consistent with earlier preference
18Study 4 Real Payoffs, Monetary Outcomes
- Replication of Study 2 with real payoffs, n38,
France - 2 pairs of outcomes, 3 pairs of time periods
19Study 4 - Results
(INSEAD, n38, within ss)
preferring to wait
RTI
RTI
RTI
20Study 4 Results cont.
(INSEAD, n38, within ss)
preferring to wait
RTI
TI
21Study 4 - Results
- for 7 vs. 10 both females and males exhibit
RTI - for 20 vs. 25 for small time periods RTI,
- for larger periods females exhibit TI
22Main Result
Evidence for reverse time inconsistency For
loyalty programs Men exhibit RTI for
hypothetical rewards women exhibit RTI for real
rewards For neutral payoffs It depends on the
relative size of SS and LL and the time interval
between them Main conclusion Intertemporal
preferences are richer than previously recognized
23Discussion
- What can explain reverse time-inconsistency?
- Utility from delayed consumption (savoring,
Loewenstein 1987) - Effort Uncertainty (sunk cost of time, Soman
2003) - Affect
- Form of discounting (elicitation study shows some
subjects exhibit a modified discounting
behaviour)
24(No Transcript)
25Conclusion
- An explicit identification of reverse
time-inconsistency - Also observed in some recent experiments
- Sholten and Read (2005), Airoldi et al (2005),
Attema et al (2006) - Implications in many domains Loyalty programs,
bank loan schedules, etc