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Individual Risk Attitudes: New Evidence from a Large, Representative, Experimentally-Validated Survey

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dc.creator Dohmen, Thomas
dc.creator Falk, Armin
dc.creator Huffman, David
dc.creator Sunde, Uwe
dc.creator Schupp, Jürgen
dc.creator Gert G. Wagner
dc.date 2005
dc.date.accessioned 2013-10-16T06:59:38Z
dc.date.available 2013-10-16T06:59:38Z
dc.date.issued 2013-10-16
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10419/18362
dc.identifier ppn:499714849
dc.identifier.uri http://koha.mediu.edu.my:8181/xmlui/handle/10419/18362
dc.description This paper presents new evidence on the distribution of risk attitudes in the population, using a novel set of survey questions and a representative sample of roughly 22,000 individuals living in Germany. Using a question that asks about willingness to take risks on an 11-point scale, we find evidence of heterogeneity across individuals, and show that willingness to take risks is negatively related to age and being female, and positively related to height and parental education. We test the behavioral relevance of this survey measure by conducting a complementary field experiment, based on a representative sample of 450 subjects, and find that the measure is a good predictor of actual risk-taking behavior. We then use a more standard lottery question to measure risk preference, and find similar results regarding heterogeneity and determinants of risk preferences. The lottery question makes it possible to estimate the coefficient of relative risk aversion for each individual in the sample. Using five questions about willingness to take risks in specific domains – car driving, financial matters, sports and leisure, career, and health – the paper also studies the impact of context on risk attitudes, finding a strong but imperfect correlation across contexts. Using data on a collection of risky behaviors from different contexts, including traffic offenses, portfolio choice, smoking, occupational choice, participation in sports, and migration, the paper compares the predictive power of all of the risk measures. Strikingly, the general risk question predicts all behaviors whereas the standard lottery measure does not. The best overall predictor for any specific behavior is typically the corresponding context-specific measure. These findings call into the question the current preoccupation with lottery measures of risk preference, and point to variation in risk perceptions as an understudied determinant of risky behavior.
dc.language eng
dc.publisher Deutsches Institut für Wirtschaftsforschung (DIW) Berlin
dc.relation DIW-Diskussionspapiere 511
dc.rights http://www.econstor.eu/dspace/Nutzungsbedingungen
dc.subject C93
dc.subject C91
dc.subject D81
dc.subject D80
dc.subject D1
dc.subject D0
dc.subject ddc:330
dc.subject risk preferences
dc.subject preference stability
dc.subject experimental validation
dc.subject field experiment
dc.subject SOEP
dc.subject gender differences
dc.subject age
dc.subject height
dc.subject Risikopräferenz
dc.subject Verhalten
dc.subject Lebensalter
dc.subject Geschlecht
dc.subject Experiment
dc.subject Deutschland
dc.title Individual Risk Attitudes: New Evidence from a Large, Representative, Experimentally-Validated Survey
dc.type doc-type:workingPaper


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