Do We Become More Cautious for Others When Large Amounts of Money Are at Stake?

Author:

Batteux Eleonore1ORCID,Ferguson Eamonn2,Tunney Richard J.3

Affiliation:

1. Centre for the Study of Decision-Making Uncertainty, University College London, UK

2. University of Nottingham, UK

3. Aston University, UK

Abstract

Abstract. A considerable proportion of financial decisions are made by agents acting on behalf of other people. Although people are more cautious for others when making medical decisions, this does not seem to be the case for economic decisions. However, studies with large amounts of money are particularly absent from the literature, which precludes a clear comparison to studies in the medical domain. To address this gap, we investigated the effect of outcome magnitude in two experiments where participants made choices between safe and risky options. Decision-makers were not more cautious for others over large amounts. In fact, risk-taking was accentuated for large amounts in the gain domain. We did not find self-other differences in the loss domain for either outcome magnitude. This suggests that the caution observed in medical decisions does not replicate in financial decisions with large amounts, or at least not in the same way. These results echo the concerns that have been raised about excessive risk-taking by financial agents.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

General Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,General Medicine

Reference44 articles.

1. The Effect of Transparency on Framing Effects in Within-Subject Designs

2. Andersson, O., Holm, H. J., Tyran, J.R. & Wengström, E. (2013). Risking Other People’s Money: Experimental Evidence on Bonus Schemes, Competition, and Altruism (pp. 1–49). IFN Working Paper.

3. Risk Preferences in Surrogate Decision Making

4. Do we make decisions for other people based on our predictions of their preferences? evidence from financial and medical scenarios involving risk

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