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Rationality Gone Awry?: Decision Making Inconsistent with Economic and Financial Theory
 
 
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Rationality Gone Awry?: Decision Making Inconsistent with Economic and Financial Theory [Hardcover]

Hugh H. Schwartz (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

0275960145 978-0275960148 September 30, 1998 annotated edition

Traditional economic and financial theory is being challenged because normative, prescriptive models derived from it are not predicting the behavior of successful producers, investors, or consumers as well as anticipated. Economists and psychologists are documenting anomalies at the individual level, in financial markets, and in natural economic settings. This opens the larger question of the importance of psychological, sociological, and other phenomena for financial and economic behavior. It even raises the issue of what economic rationality really is. This book surveys and examines the increasing evidence of economic anomalies. It argues for an eventual, comprehensive behavioral framework for economics and finance, but in the interim, indicates how the tendency to use rules of thumb might be taken into account to improve predictions about decision making.

The book is aimed at those, including business executives and students, with intermediate-level preparation in economics or finance. Part I, however, is accessible to those with only an introductory course. Part II should prove useful to professionals in economics and finance who seek a solid introduction to this area. The presentation speculates about possible applications of a behavioral analysis to past and present public policy issues. It closes with guidelines for decision making that suggest how, in the absence of a comprehensive behavioral theory of economics and finance, to improve prediction about decision making by taking into account the heuristics, or rules of thumb, used by decision makers and the biases that those heuristics involve.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"I believe that Rationality Gone Awry? will make an excellent supplement to economics and finance courses which seek to provide students with a balance between the standard neoclassical theories and the real-world of actual decision making. Economics enrollments have been declining nation-wide over the past few years, perhaps in part due to the ever-widening gap between theory and reality. I believe that books such as [this] may help reverse this trend as students seem particularly thirsty for "proof" that the disciplines of economics and finance are willing to change in response to the profusion of disconfirming evidence regarding the veracity of their models."-Catherine S. Elliott Professor of Economics New College of the University of South Florida

Book Description

Gives perspective to the increasing evidence of financial and economic anomalies and argues for a comprehensive behavioral framework for economics and finance.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Praeger; annotated edition edition (September 30, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0275960145
  • ISBN-13: 978-0275960148
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.3 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #6,795,091 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A good overview of the "new" behavioral economics(finance), February 6, 2005
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Michael Emmett Brady "mandmbrady" (Bellflower, California ,United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
Schwartz has written an excellent summary of what is now called the "new" field of behavioral economics(or psychology or finance).The title is somewhat misleading.It conflates the concept of rationality(all rational economic men and women supposedly have a complete,perfect,error free,costless information set that is clear and not subject to any ambiguity,vagueness,or uncertainty over time.Likewise,there are no computational, information processing,absorption, or digestion constraints of any kind.Based on these assumptions, economic rationality is defined to mean "engaged in continuous pursuit of optimization",the goal of which is to maximize profit or utility or minimize cost or disutility,subject to some income or resource constraint on income or output)with purely mathematical optimization problems.The idea of rationality as meaning introspection or thinking or reasoning or seeking to understand is excluded.This approach describes neoclassical economics and finance,which makes up about 80% of economics and finance.The "Irrationality"(Rationality Gone Awry...) in the title refers to the actual behavior of economic agents who ,obviously,do not come close to satisfying any of the neoclassical assumptions.At best,neoclassical theory is a normative structure without any predictive,prescriptive or descriptive capability.Schwartz credits the rise of the new behavioral economics mainly to the work of psychologists Tversky and Kahneman(TK) in the early 1970's and notes psychologist Herbert Simon's earlier work in the 1950's that unfortunately had no major impact on the manner in which economists operate.Essentially,the new behavioral economists presented huge amounts of empirical and experimental evidence that the standard subjective expected utility(SEU)model(this model is the statistical/probabilistic counterpart of the rationality model discussed above)had little empirical support if it was to be used as a descriptive,predictive or prescriptive model.A large number of anomalies were uncovered in the empirical and experimental results.This anomalous behavior directly conflicted with the results predicted and described by the SEU theory.Schwartz devotes a good number of pages to discussing and listing the various anomalies such as the preference reversal effect,conjunction effect,disjunction effect,certainty effect,translation effect,reflection effect,equity premium puzzle,etc.There are a few shortcomings.Although he clearly mentions the idea of ambiguity and gives the two urn Ellsberg problem on p.81,he neglects to give a full description of the nature of Ellsberg's conclusion-most decision makers can't give precise single number estimates of relevant probabilities.Instead,they give interval estimates due to the fact that the available information set is vague,ambiguous or unclear.Similarly,the earlier pathbreaking work done by J M Keynes in his A Treatise on Probability on interval estimates, ambiguity(weight of the evidence)and decision making(Keynes's conventional coefficient of risk and weight model in chapter 26 of the TP)is never mentioned.Lastly,the path breaking work of Benoit Mandelbrot in explaining the equity premium puzzle is not mentioned.In fact,Mandelbrot's work is not even listed.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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First Sentence:
A generation or so ago, people used to joke that economic forecasts were much like those that dealt with the weather-hardly very reliable. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
subjective probability analysis, intermediate microeconomic theory, financial rationality, behavioral game theory, behavioral economics, behavioral finance, experimental economics, preference reversals, matching law, noise traders, endowment effect, oriented economists, successful survivors, loss aversion, intertemporal choice, judgmental heuristics, maximization objective, organizational slack, traditional economists
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, American Economic Review Vol, United States, Herbert Simon, Cambridge University Press, Edward Elgar, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Paul Slovic, Free Press, Journal of Economic Perspectives Vol, Second Edition, Economic Journal Vol, Judgment Under Uncertainty, Psychological Economics, University of Chicago Press, World War, Fred van Raaij, John Wiley, The Moral Dimension, Ann Arbor, Econometrica Vol, Journal of Economic Literature Vol, Models of Bounded Rationality, Oxford University Press, Passions Within Reason
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