Individual laboratory-measured discount rates predict field behavior
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- 16 October 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Risk and Uncertainty
- Vol. 37 (2-3) , 237-269
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s11166-008-9053-x
Abstract
We estimate discount rates of 555 subjects using a laboratory task and find that these individual discount rates predict inter-individual variation in field behaviors (e.g., exercise, BMI, smoking). The correlation between the discount rate and each field behavior is small: none exceeds 0.28 and many are near 0. However, the discount rate has at least as much predictive power as any variable in our dataset (e.g., sex, age, education). The correlation between the discount rate and field behavior rises when field behaviors are aggregated: these correlations range from 0.09–0.38. We present a model that explains why specific intertemporal choice behaviors are only weakly correlated with discount rates, even though discount rates robustly predict aggregates of intertemporal decisions.Keywords
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