Antonio will deliver his seminar online via MS Teams. Title: Towards an economic theory of personality: Attitudes towards failure and success (joint with Larbi Alaoui)
Abstract: While personality has long been central to the study of psychology, it is only recently that it has drawn attention in economics, and it has done so mainly from an empirical perspective. Traits related to attitudes towards failure and success appear particularly important for economic contexts. Currently, however, we do not have a clear definition of such attitudes in terms of preferences, in a way analogous to attitude towards risk or time. This paper proposes definitions of failure avoidance, success seeking, and other related but separate attitudes towards failure and success, in terms of individuals' preferences over lotteries.Within a standard expected utility framework, appended with a reference point, we characterize properties of the Bernoulli utility functions associated to such attitudes These properties concern: (i) the relationship between the curvature of the utility functions in the failure and the success regions; (ii) the shape of function at at the reference point, which may either exhibit a discontinuity or different shape of kinks. We also show that failure avoidance accommodates, as a special case, the well-known notion of loss aversion (e.g., Kahneman and Tverski, 1979), which we characterize in terms of primitive preferences over lotteries, while success seeking includes a representation sometimes used in models of aspirations (e.g., Genicot and Ray, 2017).Lastly, we turn to comparative statics: we define the meaning of having more or less of each of these attitudes in the space of the primitive preferences over lottiers, and we characterize such orderings in terms of tractable indices based on the key features of the utility representations.
Sir Clive Granger Building糖心原创University Park Nottingham, NG7 2RD
telephone: +44 (0)115 951 5458 Enquiries: jose.guinotsaporta@nottingham.ac.ukExperiments: cedex@nottingham.ac.uk