The Nobel prizewinning economist Daniel McFadden teaching at the University of California, Berkeley,described/mentioned the idea of Everymen held by economists in 2006. “SOVEREIGN in tastes, steely-eyed and
point-on in perception of risk, and relentless in maximisation of happiness.” That this description is unlike any real person
was Mr McFadden’s point. The Nobel prizewinner wryly termed homo economicus “a rare species”. In
his latest paper* he outlines a “new science of pleasure”, in which he makes a point that economics should draw much more heavily on fields such as psychology,
neuroscience and anthropology to understand human decision making. He wants economists to accept that evidence from
other disciplines does not merely explain those bits of behaviour that do not fit
the standard models but also that they are no oddity but the norm. Rather, what economists consider anomalous is the norm. Homo
economicus, not his fallible counterpart, is the oddity.
"To take one example, the “people” in economic models have fixed preferences, which are taken as given. Yet a large body of research from cognitive psychology shows that preferences are in fact rather fluid. People value mundane things much more highly when they think of them as somehow “their own”: they insist on a much higher price for a coffee cup they think of as theirs, for instance, than for an identical one that isn’t. This “endowment effect” means that people hold on to shares well past the point where it makes sense to sell them. Cognitive scientists have also found that people dislike losing something much more than they like gaining the same amount. Such “loss aversion” can explain why people often pick insurance policies with lower deductible charges even when they are more expensive. At the moment of an accident a deductible feels like a loss, whereas all those premium payments are part of the status quo."
There are a many areas where Economics, rather let me say Micro/Macro pushed by orthodox economists fails is the role of experiences or shared memories in determining choices. For example your memory of incidents of pain or pleasure is dominated by the peaks of beginning or end of experience. In a 1996 experiment Donald Redelmeier and Daniel Kahneman, two psychologists, showed that deliberately adding a burst of pain at the end of a colonoscopy that was of lower intensity than the peak made patients think back on the experience more favourably.
Unlike 'homo economicus', as Prof MacFadden would call them, real people are strongly influenced
by such things as the order in which they see options and what happened right
before they made a choice. Incorporating these findings into models of consumer
behaviour should improve their power to predict everything from which loans
people choose to which colleges they apply for.
Now moving to the another word which has a lot of bearing on our lives, Trust. Trust is something economists already incorporate into their models. But contrary to the opinion of dismal scientists or numrerically driven Micro economists trust turns out to be not just a function of history and interactions, but also a product of brain chemistry. Pumping people with oxytocin, the so-called “love hormone”, has been found to make them much more generous in games where they have to decide how much of their money to entrust to another person who has no real incentive to return any of it. Sovereign, indeed.
Now moving to the another word which has a lot of bearing on our lives, Trust. Trust is something economists already incorporate into their models. But contrary to the opinion of dismal scientists or numrerically driven Micro economists trust turns out to be not just a function of history and interactions, but also a product of brain chemistry. Pumping people with oxytocin, the so-called “love hormone”, has been found to make them much more generous in games where they have to decide how much of their money to entrust to another person who has no real incentive to return any of it. Sovereign, indeed.
Much of this may be alien to
modern-day economists, but it is in line with the conception that other
disciplines have of human decision-making. Psychologists have long known that
people’s choices and preferences are influenced by others. Worst of all insult to an Economist is that Sadak-Chaap MBA's understand that. Even biologists have a
much clearer understanding of why are we driven towards altruism and kindness, whether to kin or
strangers, than economists, who typically emphasise the dogged pursuit of
self-interest.
This way of thinking would also have been recognisable to their intellectual forefathers. Adam Smith wrote extensively about the central role of altruism and regard for others as motivators of human behaviour. The idea of loss aversion would have made sense to Jeremy Bentham, the founder of utilitarianism: he spoke of increased pleasure and reduced pain as two distinct sources of happiness.
This way of thinking would also have been recognisable to their intellectual forefathers. Adam Smith wrote extensively about the central role of altruism and regard for others as motivators of human behaviour. The idea of loss aversion would have made sense to Jeremy Bentham, the founder of utilitarianism: he spoke of increased pleasure and reduced pain as two distinct sources of happiness.
I believes that economists need to do things differently if they are truly to understand how people make decisions. Manipulating brain activity is one way of delving into where economic choices really come from. Analysing the information people get through social networks would help them understand the role of influence and identity in decision-making. This is where corporations are taking help of cross disciplinary teams. Its not uncommon to see large firms hiring, fashion designers, architects or psychologists in their marketing teams.
Taking the path Prof McFadden urges might also lead economists to reassess some articles of faith. Economists tend to think that more choice is good. Yet people with many options sometimes fail to make any choice at all: think of workers who prefer their employers to put them by “default” into pension plans at preset contribution rates.
Such tools have implications for policy. Plenty of poor people in America are wary of programmes like the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) because the idea of getting a handout from the government reinforces a sense of helplessness. Dignity is not something mainstream economics has much truck with. The failure of our Economist Prime minister nudged by illiterate party chief who in turn is driven by her band of Jesuit Jholawala inspired nincompoops of National advisory council comes from largely this.
His failure to understand the common but powerful concept like, 'Dignity' has led him to give doles after doles & killing the sense of pleasure one gets through hardwork. He has killed the sense of dignity that one gets when he/she earns own bread. His lack of understanding 'Dignity' is evident to common men who can cite 100 such instances where any person with dignity would quit the chair of Prime minister & flung a resignation at the face of his party pres.
"But creating a sense of dignity turns out to be a powerful way of affecting decisions. One study by Crystal Hall, Jiaying Zhao and Eldar Shafir, a trio of psychologists, found that getting poor people in a soup kitchen to recall a time when they felt “successful and proud” made them almost twice as likely to accept leaflets that told them how to get an EITC refund than members of another group who were merely asked about the last meal they had eaten.
Explicitly modelling the process of making a choice might prompt economists to take a more ambiguous view of an abundance of choices. It might also make them more sceptical of “revealed preference”, the idea that a person’s valuation of different options can be deduced from his actions. This is undoubtedly messier than standard economics. So is real life."
*Quotations, citations picked up from various articles on web & one article on Forbes in particular.
*Quotations, citations picked up from various articles on web & one article on Forbes in particular.
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