Fear and Economic Behavior
Abstract
Fear is an important factor in decision-making under risk and uncertainty. Psychology research suggests that fear influences one’s risk attitude
and fear may have important consequences for decisions concerning for example investments, crime, conflicts, and politics. I model strategic interactions between players who can be in either a neutral or a fearful state of mind. A player’s state of mind determines his or her utility function. The two main assumptions are that
(i) fear is triggered by an increase in the probability or cost of negative outcomes
and (ii) a player in the fearful state is more risk averse. A player’s beliefs over the probability and cost of negative outcomes determine how the player transitions between the states of mind. I use psychological game theory to analyze the role of fear in three applications, a robbery game, a bank run game, and a public health intervention.
Publisher
University of Gothenburg
Other description
JEL Classification: C72; D01; D91
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2022-02Author
Andersson, Lina
Keywords
emotions
fear
risk aversion
psychological game theory
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
819
Language
eng