Household decision making and the influence of spouses’ income, education, and communist party membership: A field experiment in rural China
Abstract
We study household decision making in a high-stakes experiment with a random sample of
households in rural China. Spouses have to choose between risky lotteries, first separately and
then jointly. We find that spouses’ individual risk preferences are more similar the richer the
household and the higher the wife’s relative income contribution. A couple’s joint decision is
typically determined by the husband, but women who contribute relatively more to the
household income, women in high-income households, women with more education than their
husbands, and women with communist party membership have a stronger influence on the
joint decision.
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Date
2009-04-20Author
Carlsson, Fredrik
Martinsson, Peter
Qin, Ping
Sutter, Matthias
Keywords
Household decision making
Risk
Field experiment
China
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
356
Language
eng