Title | TEMPORAL INSTABILITY OF RISK PREFERENCE AMONG THE POOR: EVIDENCE FROM PAYDAY CYCLES |
Publication Type | Report |
Year of Publication | 2021 |
Authors | Akesaka, M, Eibich, P, Hanaoka, C, Shigeoka, H |
Series Title | NBER Working Paper |
Document Number | 28784 |
Institution | National Bureau of Economic Research |
City | Cambridge, MA |
Keywords | Income, instability, payday cycles, Risk preference |
Abstract | The poor live paycheck to paycheck and are repeatedly exposed to strong cyclical income fluctuations. We investigate whether such income fluctuations affect risk preference among the poor. If risk preference temporarily changes around payday, optimal decisions made before payday may no longer be optimal afterward, which could reinforce poverty. By exploiting Social Security payday cycles in the US, we find that risk preference among the poor relying heavily on Social Security changes around payday. Rather than cognitive decline before payday, the deterioration of mental health and relative deprivation may play a role. We find similar evidence among the Japanese elderly. |
DOI | 10.3386/w28784 |
Citation Key | 11747 |