Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural
Economics, Ch 05)
Lecture 23
Apr 10, 2017
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
Uncertainty and Consumer Behavior
To examine the ways that people can compare and choose
among risky alternatives, we will take the following steps:
1. In order to compare the riskiness of alternative choices, we need to
quantify risk.
2. We will examine people’s preferences toward risk.
3. We will see how people can sometimes reduce or eliminate risk.
4. In some situations, people must choose the amount of risk they wish
to bear.
In the final section of this chapter, we offer an overview of the flourishing
field of behavioral economics.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.1 DESCRIBING RISK
Probability
● probability Likelihood that a given outcome will occur.
Subjective probability is the perception that an outcome will occur.
Expected Value
● expected value Probability-weighted average of the payoffs
associated with all possible outcomes.
● payoff Value associated with a possible outcome.
The expected value measures the central tendency—the payoff or value that we would
expect on average.
Expected value = Pr(success)($40/share) + Pr(failure)($20/share)
= (1/4)($40/share) + (3/4)($20/share) = $25/share
More generally:
E(X) = Pr1X1 + Pr2X2
E(X) = Pr1X1 + Pr2X2 + . . . + PrnXn
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.1 DESCRIBING RISK
Variability
● variability Extent to which possible outcomes of an uncertain
event differ.
TABLE 5.1 Income from Sales Jobs
OUTCOME 1 OUTCOME 2 Expected
Probability Income ($) Probability Income ($) Income ($)
Job 1: Commission .5 2000 .5 1000 1500
Job 2: Fixed Salary .99 1510 .01 510 1500
● deviation Difference between expected payoff and actual payoff.
TABLE 5.2 Deviations from Expected Income ($)
Outcome 1 Deviation Outcome 2 Deviation
Job 1 2000 500 1000 500
Job 2 1510 10 510 990
● standard deviation Square root of the weighted average of the
squares of the deviations of the payoffs associated with each outcome
from their expected values.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.1 DESCRIBING RISK
Variability
Table 5.3 Calculating Variance ($)
Weighted Average
Deviation Deviation Deviation Standard
Outcome 1 Squared Outcome 2 Squared Squared Deviation
Job 1 2000 250,000 1000 250,000 250,000 500
Job 2 1510 100 510 980,100 9900 99.50
Figure 5.1
Outcome Probabilities for Two Jobs
The distribution of payoffs associated
with Job 1 has a greater spread and
a greater standard deviation than the
distribution of payoffs associated
with Job 2.
Both distributions are flat because all
outcomes are equally likely.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.1 DESCRIBING RISK
Variability
Figure 5.2
Unequal Probability Outcomes
The distribution of payoffs associated with
Job 1 has a greater spread and a greater
standard deviation than the distribution of
payoffs associated with Job 2.
Both distributions are peaked because the
extreme payoffs are less likely than those
near the middle of the distribution.
Decision Making
Table 5.4 Incomes from Sales Jobs—Modified ($)
Deviation Deviation Expected Standard
Outcome 1 Squared Outcome 2 Squared Income Deviation
Job 1 2000 250,000 1000 250,000 1600 500
Job 2 1510 100 510 980,100 1500 99.50
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.1 DESCRIBING RISK
Fines may be better than incarceration in deterring
certain types of crimes, such as speeding, double-
parking, tax evasion, and air polluting.
Other things being equal, the greater the fine, the
more a potential criminal will be discouraged from
committing the crime.
In practice, however, it is very costly to catch
lawbreakers.
Therefore, we save on administrative costs by imposing relatively high
fines.
A policy that combines a high fine and a low probability of
apprehension is likely to reduce enforcement costs.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.2 PREFERENCES TOWARD RISK
Figure 5.3
Risk Averse, Risk Loving, and
Risk Neutral
In (a), a consumer’s
marginal utility diminishes
as income increases.
The consumer is risk
averse because she would
prefer a certain income of
$20,000 (with a utility of 16)
to a gamble with a .5
probability of $10,000 and
a .5 probability of $30,000
(and expected utility of 14).
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.2 PREFERENCES TOWARD RISK
Figure 5.3
Risk Averse, Risk Loving, and
Risk Neutral (continued)
In (b), the consumer is risk
loving:
She would prefer the same
gamble (with expected
utility of 10.5) to the certain
income (with a utility of 8).
Finally, the consumer in (c)
is risk neutral,
and indifferent between
certain and uncertain
events with the same
expected income.
● expected utility Sum of the utilities associated with all possible
outcomes, weighted by the probability that each outcome will occur.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.2 PREFERENCES TOWARD RISK
Different Preferences Toward Risk
● risk averse Condition of
preferring a certain income to a
risky income with the same
expected value.
● risk neutral Condition of being
indifferent between a certain
income and an uncertain income
with the same expected value.
● risk loving Condition of
preferring a risky income to a
certain income with the same
expected value.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.2 PREFERENCES TOWARD RISK
Different Preferences Toward Risk
Risk Premium
● risk premium Maximum amount of money that a risk-averse person
will pay to avoid taking a risk.
Figure 5.4
Risk Premium
The risk premium, CF, measures
the amount of income that an
individual would give up to leave
her indifferent between a risky
choice and a certain one.
Here, the risk premium is $4000
because a certain income of
$16,000 (at point C) gives her the
same expected utility (14) as the
uncertain income (a .5 probability
of being at point A and a .5
probability of being at point E) that
has an expected value of $20,000.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.2 PREFERENCES TOWARD RISK
Different Preferences Toward Risk
Risk Aversion and Income
The extent of an individual’s risk aversion depends on the nature of the risk
and on the person’s income.
Other things being equal, risk-averse people prefer a smaller variability of
outcomes.
The greater the variability of income, the more the person would be willing to
pay to avoid the risky situation.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.2 PREFERENCES TOWARD RISK
Different Preferences Toward Risk
Risk Aversion and Indifference Curves
Figure 5.5
Risk Aversion and Indifference
Curves
Part (a) applies to a person
who is highly risk averse:
An increase in this individual’s
standard deviation of income
requires a large increase in
expected income if he or she
is to remain equally well off.
Part (b) applies to a person
who is only slightly risk
averse:
An increase in the standard
deviation of income requires
only a small increase in
expected income if he or she
is to remain equally well off.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.3 REDUCING RISK
Insurance
TABLE 5.6 The Decision to Insure ($)
Burglary No Burglary Expected Standard
Insurance (Pr = .1) (Pr = .9) Wealth Deviation
No 40,000 50,000 49,000 3000
Yes 49,000 49,000 49,000 0
The Law of Large Numbers
The ability to avoid risk by operating on a large scale is based on the law of large numbers,
which tells us that although single events may be random and largely unpredictable, the
average outcome of many similar events can be predicted.
Actuarial Fairness
● actuarially fair Characterizing a situation in which an insurance premium
is equal to the expected payout.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.3 REDUCING RISK
Suppose you are buying your first house. To close the
sale, you will need a deed that gives you clear “title.”
Without such a clear title, there is always a chance that
the seller of the house is not its true owner.
In situations such as this, it is clearly in the interest of the buyer to be sure
that there is no risk of a lack of full ownership.
The buyer does this by purchasing “title insurance.”
Because the title insurance company is a specialist in such insurance and
can collect the relevant information relatively easily, the cost of title insurance
is often less than the expected value of the loss involved.
In addition, because mortgage lenders are all concerned about such risks,
they usually require new buyers to have title insurance before issuing a
mortgage.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.3 REDUCING RISK
The Value of Information
● value of complete information
Difference between the expected value of
a choice when there is complete
information and the expected value when
information is incomplete.
TABLE 5.7 Profits from Sales of Suits ($)
Sales of 50 Sales of 100 Expected Profit
Buying 50 suits 5000 5000 5000
Buying 100 suits 1500 12,000 6750
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.3 REDUCING RISK
Per-capita consumption of milk has declined over the years—a situation that
has stirred producers to look for new strategies to encourage milk
consumption.
One strategy would be to increase advertising expenditures and to continue
advertising at a uniform rate throughout the year.
A second strategy would be to invest in market research in order to obtain
more information about the seasonal demand for milk.
Research into milk demand shows that sales follow a seasonal pattern, with
demand being greatest during the spring and lowest during the summer and
early fall.
In this case, the cost of obtaining seasonal information about milk demand is
relatively low and the value of the information substantial.
Applying these calculations to the New York metropolitan area, we discover
that the value of information—the value of the additional annual milk
sales—is about $4 million.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.3 REDUCING RISK
Suppose you were seriously ill and required major surgery.
Assuming you wanted to get the best care possible, how
would you go about choosing a surgeon and a hospital to
provide that care?
A truly informed decision would probably require more
detailed information.
This kind of information is likely to be difficult or impossible for most
patients to obtain.
More information is often, but not always, better. Whether more information
is better depends on which effect dominates— the ability of patients to
make more informed choices versus the incentive for doctors to avoid very
sick patients.
More information often improves welfare because it allows people to reduce
risk and to take actions that might reduce the effect of bad outcomes.
However, information can cause people to change their behavior in
undesirable ways.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
*5.4 THE DEMAND FOR RISKY ASSETS
Assets
● asset Something that provides a flow of
money or services to its owner.
An increase in the value of an asset is a capital gain; a decrease is a capital loss.
Risky and Riskless Assets
● risky asset Asset that provides an
uncertain flow of money or services to its
owner.
● riskless (or risk-free) asset Asset that
provides a flow of money or services that
is known with certainty.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
*5.4 THE DEMAND FOR RISKY ASSETS
Asset Returns
● return Total monetary flow of an asset as a fraction of its price.
● real return Simple (or nominal) return on an asset, less the rate of
inflation.
Expected versus Actual Returns
● expected return Return that an asset should earn on average.
● actual return Return that an asset earns.
TABLE 5.8 Investments—Risk and Return (1926–2006*)
Average Rate Average Real Rate Risk (Standard
of Return (%) of Return (%) Deviation, %)
Common stocks (S&P 500) 12.3 9.2 20.1
Long-term corporate bonds 6.2 3.1 8.5
U.S. Treasury bills 3.8 0.7 3.1
*Source: Stocks, Bonds, Bills, and Inflation: 2007 Yearbook, Morningstar, Inc.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
*5.4 THE DEMAND FOR RISKY ASSETS
The Trade-Off Between Risk and Return
The Investment Portfolio
(5.1)
(5.2)
The Investor’s Choice Problem
(5.3)
● Price of risk Extra risk that an investor must incur to enjoy a higher
expected return.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
*5.4 THE DEMAND FOR RISKY ASSETS
The Investor’s Choice Problem
Risk and Indifference Curves
Figure 5.6
Choosing Between Risk and Return
An investor is dividing her funds between two
assets—Treasury bills, which are risk free, and
stocks. The budget line describes the trade-off
between the expected return and its riskiness,
as measured by the standard deviation of the
return.
The slope of the budget line is (Rm− Rf )/σm,
which is the price of risk.
Three indifference curves are drawn, each
showing combinations of risk and return that
leave an investor equally satisfied.
The curves are upward-sloping because a risk-
averse investor will require a higher expected
return if she is to bear a greater amount of risk.
The utility-maximizing investment portfolio is at
the point where indifference curve U2 is
tangent to the budget line.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
*5.4 THE DEMAND FOR RISKY ASSETS
The Investor’s Choice Problem
Risk and Indifference Curves
Figure 5.7
The Choices of Two Different
Investors
Investor A is highly risk averse.
Because his portfolio will consist
mostly of the risk-free asset, his
expected return RA will be only
slightly greater than the risk-free
return. His risk σA, however, will
be small.
Investor B is less risk averse.
She will invest a large fraction of
her funds in stocks.
Although the expected return on
her portfolio RB will be larger, it
will also be riskier.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
*5.4 THE DEMAND FOR RISKY ASSETS
The Investor’s Choice Problem
Risk and Indifference Curves
Figure 5.8
Buying Stocks on Margin
Because Investor A is risk averse, his
portfolio contains a mixture of stocks
and risk-free Treasury bills.
Investor B, however, has a very low
degree of risk aversion.
Her indifference curve, UB, is tangent
to the budget line at a point where the
expected return and standard deviation
for her portfolio exceed those for the
stock market overall.
This implies that she would like to
invest more than 100 percent of her
wealth in the stock market.
She does so by buying stocks on
margin—i.e., by borrowing from a
brokerage firm to help finance her
investment.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
*5.4 THE DEMAND FOR RISKY ASSETS
Why have more people started investing in the
stock market? One reason is the advent of online
trading, which has made investing much easier.
Figure 5.9
Dividend Yield and P/E Ratio
for S&P 500
The dividend yield for the
S&P 500 (the annual
dividend divided by the
stock price) has fallen
dramatically,
while the price/earnings
ratio (the stock price
divided by the annual
earnings-per-share) rose
from 1980 to 2002 and
then dropped.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.5 BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS
Recall that the basic theory of consumer demand is based on three
assumptions:
(1) consumers have clear preferences for some goods over others;
(2) consumers face budget constraints; and
(3) given their preferences, limited incomes, and the prices of different
goods, consumers choose to buy combinations of goods that maximize
their satisfaction or utility.
These assumptions, however, are not always realistic.
Perhaps our understanding of consumer demand (as well as the decisions
of firms) would be improved if we incorporated more realistic and detailed
assumptions regarding human behavior.
This has been the objective of the newly flourishing field of behavioral
economics.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.5 BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS
More Complex Preferences
● reference point The point from which an
individual makes a consumption decision.
● endowment effect Tendency of
individuals to value an item more when they
own it than when they do not.
● loss aversion Tendency for individuals to
prefer avoiding losses over acquiring gains.
Rules of Thumb and Biases in Decision Making
● anchoring Tendency to rely heavily on
one prior (suggested) pieces of information
when making a decision.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.5 BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS
Probabilities and Uncertainty
An important part of decision making under uncertainty is the calculation of expected
utility, which requires two pieces of information: a utility value for each outcome (from
the utility function) and the probability of each outcome.
People are sometimes prone to a bias called the law of small numbers: They tend to
overstate the probability that certain events will occur when faced with relatively little
information from recent memory.
Forming subjective probabilities is not always an easy task and people are generally
prone to several biases in the process.
Summing Up
The basic theory that we learned up to now helps us to understand and evaluate the
characteristics of consumer demand and to predict the impact on demand of changes in
prices or incomes.
The developing field of behavioral economics tries to explain and to elaborate on those
situations that are not well explained by the basic consumer model.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.5 BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS
Most cab drivers rent their taxicabs for a
fixed daily fee from a company. As with many
services, business is highly variable from day
to day. How do cabdrivers respond to these
variations, many of which are largely
unpredictable?
A recent study analyzed actual taxicab trip records obtained from
the New York Taxi and Limousine Commission for the spring of
1994. The daily fee to rent a taxi was then $76, and gasoline cost
about $15 per day.
Surprisingly, the researchers found that most drivers drive more
hours on slow days and fewer hours on busy days.
In other words, there is a negative relationship between the effective
hourly wage and the number of hours worked each day.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
5.5 BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS
A different study, also of New York City
cabdrivers who rented their taxis, concluded
that the traditional economic model does
indeed offer important insights into drivers’
behavior.
The study concluded that daily income had only a small effect on a
driver’s decision as to when to quit for the day.
Rather, the decision to stop appears to be based on the cumulative
number of hours already worked that day and not on hitting a
specific income target.
What can account for these two seemingly contradictory results?
The two studies used different techniques in analyzing and
interpreting the taxicab trip records.
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
Piano stairs
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
How to encourage using dustbin?
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
Microeconomics (Uncertainty & Behavioural Economics, Ch 05)
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