Intertemporal Correlation Aversion—A Model-Free Measurement
提出一种无模型方法测量跨期相关厌恶程度,区分对正相关和负相关的态度,实验发现平均而言人们厌恶正相关、偏好负相关,且多数人违背期望跨期效用。
Decisions with risky consequences at multiple points in time are driven not only by risk attitudes and time preferences but also by attitudes toward intertemporal correlation (i.e., the correlation between outcomes at different points in time). This paper proposes a model-free method to measure degrees of intertemporal correlation aversion. We disentangle attitudes toward positive and negative intertemporal correlation, which can differ if expected intertemporal utility is violated. In an experiment, subjects on average exhibited correlation aversion both for lotteries with positive correlation and for lotteries with negative correlation. That is, they disliked positive correlations and liked negative correlations. At the individual level, we found heterogeneity and remarkably, many subjects being insensitive to intertemporal correlations. Moreover, for most subjects, expected intertemporal utility was violated because attitudes toward positive and negative correlation differed. This paper was accepted by Ilia Tsetlin, behavioral economics and decision analysis. Funding: Erasmus Research Institute of Management provided financial support. Supplemental Material: The data files and online appendix are available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4863 .