PRIN OF MICROECONOMICS
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9780393914085
Author: coppock
Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
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Chapter 17, Problem 7SP
To determine
The behavior of the people towards the charity and the tips.
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Explain two or more of the behavioral economics concepts listed below and give an example of each
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Concepts: Confirmation bias, overconfidence effect, hindsight bias, availability heuristic, planning fallacy, framing effects, anchoring, endowment effect, status quo effect
why is behavioral economic beliefs better than traditional economic
Suppose you are designing an intervention to increase daily physical activity among adults. Describe how you would draw on concepts from behavioral economics to design the intervention.
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- Do 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 Indicate whether each of the following examples of behavior is consistent with the way the traditional economic framework suggests people should act, or whether it is reserved for behavioral economists to examine. Reserved for Consistent with the Predictions of Behavioral Example Traditional Economic Models Economics Some people care about how much money they make relative to other people rather than their absolute level of income. Some people would be willing to make a large sacrifice in order to help a loved one. Some people treat $55 they earn differently from $55 they win in a random drawing. Some people choose to work fewer hours after receiving a raise at work.arrow_forwardPeer pressure is an important influence on the behavior of youngsters. For instance, many preteens begin smoking because their friends pressure them into being “cool” by smoking. Using utility theory, how would you explain peer pressure? How would this compare with the explanations provided by behavioral economics and neuroeconomics?arrow_forward
- What is the goal of behavioral economics? Group of answer choices To eliminate the consumers’ state of mind from consideration in economic analysis. To shift economic theory from a mathematical base to more of a psychological study. To integrate the insights of psychology into economics to enrich our understanding of decision-making. To study consumer behavior over time rather than behavior in the moment and integrate these insights in economic analysis.arrow_forwardExplain behavioral economic beliefarrow_forwardWhen 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_forward
- Parker's shares of stock in ACME Corporation lost $100 in value, but his shares in XYZ, İnc. gained $350. According to behavioral economics research, how would Parker feel as a result of these changes? Multiple Choice Parker would feel about the same. Parker would feel better off. Parker would feel worse off. Behavioral economics research suggest that the intensity of losses versus gains follows no measurable pattern.arrow_forward2 examples of behavioral economics.arrow_forwardBehavioral economics helps explain: which of the following????????????? a)why people are rational. b)why people are selfish. c)why being selfish is rational. d)the degree to which people are altruistic. Give typing answer with explanation and conclusionarrow_forward
- When a person buys a more fuel-efficient car or air conditioner, we often observe them using it more intensively. As a result of this behavioral response, the reduction in energy consumption is partially undone. Economists refer to this behavioral phenomenon as: Select one: a. Additionality. b. Leakage. c. The rebound effect. d. Slippage.arrow_forwardThe Foundations of Behavioral Economic Analysis Consider the following property of choice correspondence : Show that maximization of complete and transitive preference satisfies β-axiom. I need this ASAParrow_forwardWe 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:arrow_forward
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