Behavioral economics

Author Topic: Behavioral economics  (Read 1171 times)

Offline munna99185

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Behavioral economics
« on: March 12, 2014, 11:43:38 AM »
Behavioral economics is the study of psychology as it relates to the economic decision making processes of individuals and institutions. The two most important questions in this field are:
1. Are economists' assumptions of utility or profit maximization good approximations of real people's behavior?
2. Do individuals maximize subjective expected utility?

Behavioral economics explores why people sometimes make irrational decisions, and why and how their behavior does not follow the predictions of economic models. Notable individuals in the study of behavioral economics are Nobel laureates Gary Becker (motives, consumer mistakes; 1992), Herbert Simon (bounded rationality; 1978), Daniel Kahneman (illusion of validity, anchoring bias; 2002) and George Akerlof (procrastination; 2001). 
[Source: http://www.investopedia.com/terms/b/behavioraleconomics.asp]

Sayed Farrukh Ahmed
Assistant Professor
Faculty of Business & Economics
Daffodil International University