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The globalizability of temporal discounting

Authors :
Kai Ruggeri
Amma Panin
Milica Vdovic
Bojana Većkalov
Nazeer Abdul-Salaam
Jascha Achterberg
Jolly Amatya
Kanchan Amatya
Arjoon Arunasalam
Sarah Ashcroft-Jones
Aseman Bagheri Sheshdeh
Eike Kofi Buabang
Matthias Burghart
Sibele Dias Aquino
Ludvig Daae Bjørndal
Ana-Maria Cazan
Georgia Clay
Simone D'Ambrogio
Tatianna Dugue
David Feng
René Freichel
Lucia Freira
Maja Friedemann
Ziwei Gao
Sandra Jeanette Geiger
Marlene Hecht
David Izydorczyk
Lea Jakob
Hannes Jarke
Ondřej Kácha
Ralitsa Karakasheva
Emmanuel Kemel
Jakub Maciej Krawiec
Nato Lagidze
Aleksandra Lazić
Hyung Seo Lee
Zan Lep
Samuel Lins
Metasebiya Ayele Mamo
Silvana Mareva
Sebastian A. Meyer
Lucy McGill
Sharon McParland
Szymon Bartłomiej Mizak
Aizhan Mukhyshbayeva
Joaquin Navajas
Dragana Neshevska
Ana Elsa Nieto
Franziska Nippold
Julia Marie Oberschulte
Riinu Pae
Tsvetelina Panchelieva
Sun Young Park
Daria Stefania Pascu
Gerhard M. Prinz
Nikolay R. Rachev
Josip Razum
Charlotte Rutherford
Rand Said
Inés Sanguino
Yarden Shir
D. Elisabeth C. Sievert
Irina Soboleva
Felice Tavera
Anna Louise Todsen
Volodymyr Vakhitov
Adrianna Jordan Valencia
Tina Venema
Jáchym Vintr
Marek Albert Vranka
Lisa Wagner
Kailin Xu
Aleksandra Yosifova
Zorana Zupan
Eduardo Garcia-Garzon
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Center for Open Science, 2021.

Abstract

Economic inequality is associated with extreme rates of temporal discounting, which is a behavioral pattern where individuals choose smaller, immediate financial gains over larger, delayed gains. Such patterns may feed into rising global inequality, yet it is unclear if they are a function of choice preferences or norms, or rather absence of sufficient resources to meet immediate needs. It is also not clear if these reflect true differences in choice patterns between income groups. We test temporal discounting and five intertemporal choice anomalies using local currencies and value standards in 61 countries. Across a diverse sample of 13,629 participants, we found highly consistent rates of choice anomalies. Individuals with lower incomes were not significantly different, but economic inequality and broader financial circumstances impact population choice patterns.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a93f0b19fdaee5bb4b6c72fa237629e0