Lottery- and survey-based risk attitudes linked through a multichoice elicitation task

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TitreLottery- and survey-based risk attitudes linked through a multichoice elicitation task
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuteursAttanasi G, Georgantzis N, Rotondi V, Vigani D
JournalTHEORY AND DECISION
Volume84
Pagination341-372
Date PublishedMAY
Type of ArticleArticle; Proceedings Paper
ISSN0040-5833
Mots-clésElicitation methods, Lottery choices, Risk aversion
Résumé

We analyze the results from three different risk attitude elicitation methods. First, the broadly used test by Holt and Laury (2002), HL, second, the lottery-panel task by Sabater-Grande and Georgantzis (2002), SG, and third, responses to a survey question on self-assessment of general attitude towards risk (Dohmen et al. 2011). The first and the second task are implemented with real monetary incentives, while the third concerns all domains in life in general. Like in previous studies, the correlation of decisions across tasks is low and usually statistically non-significant. However, when we consider only subjects whose behavior across the panels of the SG task is compatible with constant relative risk aversion (CRRA), the correlation between HL and self-assessed risk attitude becomes significant. Furthermore, the correlation between HL and SG also increases for CRRA-compatible subjects, although it remains statistically non-significant.

DOI10.1007/s11238-017-9613-0