Heuristics as Decision Rules - Part I: The Cobb Douglas Consumer
Many consumption prices are highly volatile. It would certainly overburden our cognitive system to fully adjust to all these changes. Households therefore often rely on simple heuristics when deciding what to consume, e.g. in the form of a constant budget share for a specific consumption commodity, like a vacation, or of a constant consumption amount for low-cost commodities as food items. Using utility functions we can measure the welfare loss, caused by such heuristics, and to what extent this can be reduced by adaptation. In the present Part I the analysis is mainly restricted to a single consumer with a Cobb-Douglas utility function. General utility functions will also be considered. Part II will study exchange economies
Year of publication: |
2001
|
---|---|
Authors: | Güth, Werner ; Neuefeind, Wilhelm |
Published in: |
Homo Oeconomicus. - Institute of SocioEconomics. - Vol. 18.2001, p. 177-197
|
Publisher: |
Institute of SocioEconomics |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Heuristics as decision rules: Part I: the single consumer
Güth, Werner, (2001)
-
Heuristics as decision rules: Part I: the single consumer
Güth, Werner, (2001)
-
Güth, Werner, (2001)
- More ...