Examining the Effect of Short-Term Affect on Farmers’ Risk and Time Preferences in Financial Decision-Making

2021 ◽  
pp. 232102222110596
Author(s):  
Toritseju Begho ◽  
Omotuyole I. Ambali

Farmers regularly make intertemporal decisions under risk or uncertainty. To improve how farmers behave when faced with decisions that have financial consequences, there is a need for a deeper understanding of farmers’ risk and time preferences. While the relationship between individual components of affect and risk preferences is well documented, the same cannot be said for holistic measures of affect on one hand, and for affect and time preferences on the other hand. The data analysed in this paper is the 2014–2015 Indonesian Family Life Survey Wave 5. The survey included experimental measures designed to elicit both risk and time preferences from the same subjects. We analysed the data using limited dependent variable regression models. Our findings strengthen what is known about the affect infusion model. With increased pleasant affect, farmers’ willingness to take risks increases significantly. The results also suggest that pleasant affect is associated with increased odds that farmers will choose future rewards in the long horizon but had no statistically significant effect on the short horizon. The practical implications are that an experience of pleasant affect before decision-making may cause the decision-maker (DM) to perceive a prospect as having high benefits and low risks. Pleasant affect may also induce lower sensitivity towards losses and play the role of a buffer which reduces the immediate negative impact of information that otherwise would prevent the DM from focusing on the long-term. JEL Classifications: C93, D81, D91

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 42-53
Author(s):  
Orhan Erdem ◽  
Amy Martin

Although religion is shown to be associated with several prosocial behaviors, not much work has been done on the relationship with economic or financial decision-making. This study aims to fill this gap. Surveying 87 undergraduate students under controlled laboratory conditions, the authors analyzed the effect of subtle reminders of religious concepts on time preferences in relation to finances. The results of the experiments showed that reminding participants of religious themes decreased the percentage of present bias by 10.4%.


1989 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 163-167
Author(s):  
M. A. Van Hoepen ◽  
I. J. Lambrechts ◽  
F. J. Mostert

The application of a gearing adjustment in inflation accounting has always resulted in the problem of determining a financing sequence. A decision has to be taken whether certain categories of assets are financed with equity and/or loan capital. Financial theory of the last few decades quite convincingly revealed that there are no logical grounds for relating certain assets to certain liabilities and/or equity. This proportional financing assumption is discussed and illustrated in the article for the so-called Van der Schroeff-system of income demermination in order to point out the sensitivity and financial consequences of this assumption for financial decision making. The assumption about the financing sequence does have a definite influence on the gearing adjustment. Further influences are on the income statement and the message given to shareholders and the investment public; the composition of the asset structure and consequently the risk composition of the assets; the composition of the financing structure and consequently the financial risk as portrayed by the balance sheet; and the marginal financing ratios needed to maintain the original gearing ratio.


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gergana Y. Nenkov ◽  
Deborah MacInnis ◽  
Maureen Morrin

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen J. Guastello ◽  
Katherine Reiter ◽  
Anton Shircel ◽  
Paul Timm ◽  
Matthew Malon ◽  
...  

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