1 The Paradox of Self-Destructive Choices.- 2 Varying Impatience.- 3 Hyperbolic discounting and Self-Destructive Behaviors.- 4 Self-Control Problems Of The Dual Self.- 5 Overborrowing, Overeating and Addictive Behavior.- 6 Coping with Self-Destructive Behavior.
Shinsuke Ikeda is a professor at the Institute of Social and
Economic Research (ISER), Osaka University, and serves as the director of the Research Centre of Behavioral Economics in ISER. He received a B.Com. at Kobe University in 1980 and a Ph.D. (economics) at Osaka University in 1997. He is the former president of the Association of Behavioral Economics and Finance. Dr. Ikeda has published articles on behavioral economics, macroeconomic dynamics, and asset pricing in the Journal of Finance, Journal of Health Economics, Journal of International Economics, Journal of Monetary Economics, and the International Economic Review, among others. With H. Kato, F. Ohtake, and Y. Tsutsui, he has jointly edited two volumes on behavioral economics: Behavioral Economics of Preferences, Choices, and Happiness (Springer, 2015, forthcoming); and Behavioral Interactions, Markets, and Economic Dynamics: Topics in Behavioral Economics (Springer, 2015, forthcoming). lse" UnhideWhenUsed="false" QFormat="true" Name="Intense Emphasis"/>
Based on recent advances in economics, especially those in behavioral economics, this book elucidates theoretically and empirically the mechanism of time-inconsistent decision making that leads to various forms of self-destructive behavior. The topics include over-eating and obesity, over-spending, over-borrowing, under-saving, procrastination, smoking, gambling, over-drinking, and other intemperate behaviors, all of which relate to serious social problems in advanced countries.
In this book, the author attempts to construct a bridge between the basic theory of time discounting, especially as of hyperbolic discounting, and empirically observed “irrational (non-classical)” behavior in the various contexts just mentioned. The empirical validity of the theory is discussed using unique micro data a
s well as public macro data. The book proposes prescriptions for individual decision makers, whether sophisticated or naïve, to make better choices in self-control problems, and also provides policy makers with useful advice for influencing people’s decision making in the right directions.
This work is recommended not only to general readers who seek to learn how to attain better self-regulation under self-control problems. It also helps researchers who seek an overview of positive and normative implications of hyperbolic discounting, and thereby reconstruct economic theory for a better understanding of actual human behavior and the resulting economic dynamics
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