Intertemporal choice shifts in households: Do they occur and are they good?
Abstract
We examine whether and to what extent joint choices are more or less patient and time-consistent than individual choices in households. We use data from an artefactual field experiment where both individual and joint time preferences were elicited. We find a substantial shift from individual to joint household decisions. Interestingly, joint decisions do not only generate beneficial shifts, i.e., patient and time-consistent shifts. On the contrary, a majority of the observed shifts are impatient and time-inconsistent shifts. A number of observable characteristics are significantly correlated with these shifts in preferences from individual decisions to joint decisions.
Other description
JEL classification: C91; C92; C93; D10
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Date
2013-06Author
Carlsson, Fredrik
Yang, Xiaojun
Keywords
individual decisions
joint decisions
patience
time-consistency
choice shifts
rural China
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
569
Language
eng