Abstract
In this paper, we ask whether variation in preference anomalies is related to variation in cognitive ability. Evidence from a new laboratory study of Chilean high-school students with similar schooling backgrounds shows that small-stakes risk aversion and short-run discounting are less common among those with higher standardized test scores. The relationship with test scores survives controls for parental education and wealth. We find some evidence that elementary-school GPA is predictive of preferences measured at the end of high school. Two laboratory interventions provide suggestive evidence of a possible causal impact of cognitive resources on expressed preferences. © 2013 by the European Economic Association.
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CITATION STYLE
Benjamin, D. J., Brown, S. A., & Shapiro, J. M. (2013). WHO is “behavioral”? Cognitive ability and anomalous preferences. Journal of the European Economic Association, 11(6), 1231–1255. https://doi.org/10.1111/jeea.12055
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