We administer the Allais paradox questions to both a representative sample of the Dutch population and to student subjects. Three treatments are implemented: one with the original high hypothetical payoffs, one with low hypothetical payoffs and a third with low real payoffs. Our key findings are: (i) violations in the non-lab sample are systematic and a large bulk of violations is likely to stem from non-familiarity with large payoffs, (ii) we can identify groups of the general population that have much higher than average violation rates; this concerns mainly the lowly educated and unemployed, and (iii) the relative treatment differences in the population at large are accurately predicted by the lab sample, but violation rates in all lab treatments are about 15 percentage points lower than in the corresponding non-lab treatments. © 2012 The Author(s).
CITATION STYLE
Huck, S., & Müller, W. (2012). Allais for all: Revisiting the paradox in a large representative sample. Journal of Risk and Uncertainty, 44(3), 261–293. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11166-012-9142-8
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