PRIN OF MICROECONOMICS
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780393914085
Author: coppock
Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Question
Chapter 17, Problem 2QR
To determine
Hot hand fallacy and the Gambler’s fallacy.
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
why is behavioral economic beliefs better than traditional economic
We learned that we can use choice between a gamble over someone's best and worst outcomes and getting an outcome of interest (like getting pizza) for certain as a way to assign numeric values to utility (on a scale of 0 to 1).
Using this method, if you are indifferent between the following:
A gamble that has a 0.3 chance of your best possible outcome (and no lower chance), and a 0.7 chance of your worst possible outcome.
Getting pizza for certain.
it means that your utility for getting pizza is:
What does behavioral economics have to say about each of the following statements? a. “Nobody is truly charitable—they just give money to show off.” b. “America has a ruthless capitalist system. Considerations of fairness are totally ignored.” c. “Selfish people always get ahead. It’s like nobody even notices!”
Knowledge Booster
Similar questions
- what are some keypoints about behavioral economics?arrow_forwardWhat would behavioral economics say about each of the following statements? a. “Nobody is truly charitable-people donate money just to show off." b. “America has a ruthless capitalist system. Considerations of fairness are totally ignored." c. “Selfish people always get ahead. It's like nobody even notices!"arrow_forward2 examples of behavioral economics.arrow_forward
- What is loss aversion? Explain how the topic is related to behavioral economics? Give at least two examples.arrow_forwardWhat do you think of the ethics of using unconscious nudges to alter people’s behavior?arrow_forwardSuppose Justine and Sarah are playing the ultimatum game. Justine is the proposer, has $140 to allocate, and Sarah can accept or reject the offer. Based on repeated experiments of the ultimatum game, what combination of payouts to Justine and Sarah is most likely to occur?.arrow_forward
- Styles In an auction, potential buyers compete for a good by submitting bids. Adam Gallinsky, a social scientist from NWU, compared eBay auctions in which the same good was sold. He found on average that, the higher the number of bidders the higher the sales price. For example, in two separate auctions of identical IPods, the one with the higher number of bidders brought the higher sales price. According to Gallinsky, this explains why smart sellers set absurdly low opening prices (the lowest price the seller will accept), such as 1 cent for a new IPod. Use the concept of consumer and producer surplus to explain this reasoning.arrow_forwardDo you believe in the principles of behavioral economics as the new way to guide economic thought and theory or are the fundamentals of traditional economics(eg. Efficient Markets Hypothesis) a necessary baseline which enables us to then understand deviations from rationality? Why? Give two examples of both real-life irrationality (behavioral economics) and rationality (traditional economics).arrow_forwardBehavioral economics has been around for a while but it is experiencing a new resurgence. Note: ✓ Select an option True False er than the Save Answer button will NOT save any changes to yourarrow_forward
- When consumers were given the opportunity to select a package of ground beef labeled “75% lean” or a package of ground beef labeled “25% fat,” most consumers chose “75% lean.” Why? What concept from the chapter does this illustrate? The reason is that consumers are swayed by cheap talk. Cheap talk is the concept. The reason is that consumers are much more likely to choose the alternative framed as the positive option. This is called a framing effect. The reason is that consumers infer the value of a product from positive advertising. This is called inference induction. The reason is that consumers respond better to higher numbers. They feel they are getting more because 75 is greater than 25. The concept is the endowment effect.arrow_forwardplease helparrow_forwardThe following four figures show the utility of wealth functions for 4 different consumers. Which consumer is the most likely to accept a coin toss gamble where she could win $10 if heads and lose $10 if tails? A B C D نان A Wealth B Wealth C Wealth D Wealtharrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you