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Economic Rockstar

Connecting Brilliant Minds in Economics and Finance

094: Daniel Crosby on Stock Market Investment Errors and the Price Earnings Ratio

July 14, 2016 by Frank

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094: Daniel Crosby on Stock Market Investment Errors and the Price Earnings Ratio

Dr. Daniel Crosby is a psychologist, behavioral finance expert and asset manager who daniel crosby economic rockstarapplies his study of market psychology to everything from financial product design to security selection. 

Daniel is author of 2 books – The Laws of Wealth: Psychology and the secret to investing success and You’re not that Great. He is co-author of the New York Times bestseller Personal Benchmark: Integrating Behavioral Finance and Investment Management.

Dr. Crosby is founder of Nocturne Capital. His ideas have appeared in the Huffington Post and Risk Management Magazine, as well as his monthly columns for WealthManagement.com and Investment News.

Daniel was named one of the “12 Thinkers to Watch” by Monster.com, a “Financial Blogger You Should Be Reading” by AARP and in the “Top 40 Under 40” by Investment News.

Daniel was educated at Brigham Young and Emory Universities.

Economics:

Volatility, stock markets, behavioral finance, investments, human error, behavioral bias, money, confirmation bias, loss aversion, price earnings ratio, CAPE, Quantitative Easing and central banks.

Economists:

Benjamin Graham, Christopher Geczy, Jeremy Siegel, Robert Shiller and John Paulson.

We lose 13% of our IQ when we are under stress, so even if you know all of these great lessons about the way the markets work, you tend to have least access to them when you need those lessons the most. – Daniel Crosby

5 consistent factors that underlie the 100 ways that we can make mistakes:

1. Ego – The belief that we are special or different.

2. Emotion – Allowing our feelings to drive our perception of risk.

When we’re in a good mood, the world seems to be a safe place to be. Equity markets seem to be a safe place to be. The opposite is also true.

3. Conservation – A preference for the status quo & Asymmetry – the way we see loses versus gains.

We are much more upset with a loss than a similarly sized gain.

4. Information – We have too much data available for our brains to absorb.

The Fed releases 45,000 pieces of economic data each month. There is no way that we can comprehend all of that. We have information processing problems and we mis-weight data.

5. Attention – Salience trumps probability.

The more vividly we’re able to think  about something, the more probable it seems

Books:

  • The Laws of Wealth: Psychology and the Secret to Investing Success by Daniel Crosby
  • You’re Not That Great by Daniel Crosby
  • Personal Benchmark: Integrating Behavioral Finance and Investment Management by Chuck Widger and Daniel Crosby
  • The Behavioral Finance Reading List featured on Nocturne Capital.

Links:

  • Nocturne Capital
  • 212 Years of Price Momentum (The World’s Longest Back Test: 1801 – 2012) by Christopher Geczy and Mikhail Samonov

Weatherman, Michael Fish gets it wrong with the 1987 Storm in England

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070: Chronis Lalas on Prospect Theory and ‘Making a Behavioral Economist’

January 28, 2016 by Frank

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070: Chronis Lalas on Prospect Theory and ‘Making a Behavioral Economist’

Chronis Lalas is an aspiring Behavioral Economist who is researching and publishing about the applications of chronis lalasBehavioral Economics in the real world. Chronis is a recent graduate of the University of Macedonia, Greece with a BA in Economics.

Chronis blogs at The Newbie Economist and aspires to be a behavioral economist that will optimize Fortune 500 corporations’ marketing campaigns through analyzing their existing customers’ behavior.

He aims to bring a fresh perspective to traditional economics by optimizing in consumer behavior analysis and brand management. As a young economist, his vision is to inspire students and the young generation to take on Behavioral Economics. His work has been published, amongst others, in the Online Political and Economic Newspaper The European Sting.

Economists:

In this interview, Chronis mentions: George Lowenstein, Dilip Soman, Leigh Caldwell, Yoram Bauman, Steve Keen and Dan Ariely.

Economics:

In this interview, Chronis mentions: behavioral economics, prospect theory, confirmation bias, loss aversion, financial crisis, capital controls, austerity, nudge and utility theory.

Who Chronis Would Love to Collaborate with:

Dan Ariely, Rory Sutherland of Ogilvy and Nir Eyal.

In this episode you will learn:

  • what is Prospect Theory.
  • about the infamous Prospect Theory graph.
  • about loss aversion and how Prospect Theory differs to Bernoulli’s Utility Theory.
  • how Prospect Theory is observed in Greece post the financial crisis.
  • about the reciprocity shown by TOMS shoes in Thessaloniki.
  • what makes consumers buy.
  • how consumer behavior can be influenced by manipulating their subconscious through a creatively built environment.
  • How playing French music influences the purchase of French wine.
  • How the names of products and how they are pronounced can change the way consumers think about the product.
  • why and how companies should consider a brand name for their product or service so as to maintain long-term customer loyalty.
  • about the plans that Chronis is undertaking including his behavioral economics comic.

Prospect Theory Paper and Graph:

  • Kahneman, D. and Tversky, A. (1979). Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision under Risk. Econometrica, 47(2), pp. 263-291.

Books:

  • Thinking, Fast and Slow by Kahneman and Tversky
  • Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely
  • Nudge by Thaler and Sunstein
  • Misbehaving by Richard Thaler
  • Hooked: How to Build Habit-Forming Products by Nir Eyal
  • Why We Buy: The Science of Shopping by Paco Underhill
  • Decoded: The Science Behind Why We Buy by Phil Barden

Blog:

  • www.nirandfar.com by Nir Eyal
  • www.behavioraleconomics.com by Alain Samson
  • www.thebehaviouraleconomicslab.co.uk

Links:

  • Episode 067 of the Economic Rockstar podcast with Leigh Caldwell 
  • Behavioral Economics in Action by Dilip Soman 
  • The Behavioral Economics Guide 2015

Research:

  • North, A. C. The Effect of Background Music on the Taste of Wine.
  • North, A. C., Hargreaves, D. C. and McKendrick, J. (1997). In-store music affects product choice. Nature
  • Maglio, S. J., Rabaglia, C. D., Feder, M. A., Krehm, M. and Trope, Y. (2014). Vowel Sounds in Words Affect Mental Construal and Shift Preferences for Targets. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General.

Where to Find Chronis:

  • Website: The Newbie Economist
  • Email: chronis@lalas.info

Credits:

  • Parisian Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
    http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
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047: Victor Ricciardi on The Psychology of Financial Planning and Investing

August 27, 2015 by Frank

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047: Victor Ricciardi on The Psychology of Financial Planning and Investing

Victor Ricciardi is Finance Professor at Goucher College, Baltimore, Maryland where he teaches courses in Victor Ricciardipersonal financial planning, corporate finance, investments, behavioral finance, and the psychology of money.

Victor is the Coordinator of Behavioral & Experimental Research for the Social Science Research Network also known as SSRN.

Victor is the current Editor for seven SSRN eJournals including Behavioral & Experimental Finance, History of Finance, and Behavioral & Experimental Economics.

He received his PhD from Golden Gate University and his MBA from St. John’s University.

Victor’s current book Investor Behavior: The Psychology of Financial Planning and Investing with co-editor Kent Baker is now available and has 30 chapters on emerging research in behavioral finance.

In this episode, you will learn:

  • the difference between Behavioral Economics and Behavioral Finance.
  • the rational approach to investing and whether it exists.
  • what bounded rationality really means.
  • if companies help you make decisions for their own personal benefit.
  • how framing can be a powerful tool to help customers make decisions.
  • the importance of financial literacy at different stages of your life.
  • the similarities between behavioral economics and marketing.
  • the future of Behavioral Economics and Behavioral Finance.
  • how your mood, good or bad, can influence your buying behaviour and increase risk-taking.
  • about the importance of studying the subconscious mind in finance or neurofinance.
  • why people generally do not take losses, known as loss aversion.
  • why Victor disagreed with the traditional views of economics and decided to study behavioral finance.
  • how and why some governments are using behavioural finance and economics techniques to nudge us to make better financial decisions in our lives.
  • how status quo bias makes it harder for employees to opt out of an automatically enrolled savings retirement plan.
  • how mounting student debt and high youth unemployment in the US could make it difficult to service pensions leading to a pension ‘ponzi’ scheme or a crisis.
  • why Victor Ricciardi believes that there should have been a law designed to make retirement planning easier for the employee.
  • what you should do when investing so as to manage bull and bear market cycles.

Economics:

In this interview, Victor mentions and discusses: behavioral Economics, Behavioral Finance, rational, bounded rationality, heuristics, framing, annuity puzzle, investment, consumption, self-control bias, nudging, consumer behavior, mutual returns, savings, investments, neurofinance, risk tolerance, over-confidence, loss aversion, nudging, status quo bias, retirement planning and wage inflation.

Economists:

In this interview, Victor mentions and discusses: Richard Peterson, Douglas Rice, Daniel Kahnemann, Amos Tversky, Robert Olson, Richard Thaler and Hersh Shefrin.

Influencers:

William Sharpe, Harry Markovicz, Terence Odean, Robert Olsen, Dan Ariely, Mair Stockman, Hersch Shefrin and John Nofsinger.

Quotes by Victor Ricciardi in Episode 047 of the Economic Rockstar Podcast:

Behavioural Finance is the notion of integrating psychology with finance. So you’re looking at some major themes where people are not only rational but they make decisions based on emotions. – Victor Ricciardi

Risk tolerance is the maximum amount of risk a person is willing to take in their overall portfolio or risky asset. Typically, people are either very conservative risk-takers, they’re average or they’re very aggressive. The component of risk tolerance that’s related to it is known as ‘Risk Perception’, in which our feelings and emotions will increase or have an impact on our overall risk tolerance. – Victor Ricciardi

Takeaway:

Meet with a financial planner and get a financial plan done. In terms of investing, try to understand what type of investor you are and come with an asset allocation that you are comfortable with. Rebalance your portfolio on a year basis which allows you to stay within your risk tolerance. – Victor Ricciardi

Recommend Resources:

  • Twitter

Recommend Books:

  • Investor Behavior: The Psychology of Financial Planning and Investing by Victor Ricciardi and Kent Baker
  • The Psychology of Investing by Jon Nofsinger
  • Irrationally Yours by Dan Ariely
  • Predictably Irrational by Dan Ariely
  • Misbehaving by Richard Thaler

Where to Find Victor Ricciardi:

  • Twitter
  • Goucher College
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036: Jason Shogren on Music and Endogenous Risk and Rationality in the Environmental Goods Market

June 11, 2015 by Frank

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036: Jason Shogren on Music and Endogenous Risk and Rationality in the Environmental Goods Market

Jason Shogren is the Stroock Professor of Natural Resource Conservation and Management and Chair of the Department of Economics and Finance at the University of Wyoming.Jason Shogren

Professor Shogren’s background and research interests include the economics of environmental and natural resource policy, experimental methods; endangered species; invasive species; climate change; agricultural and forest management; energy; health; regulation; and paleoeconomics.

Jason has been named a fellow of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists (AERE), the nation’s pre-eminent professional society for environmental economists and policy.

Jason served as professor to Sweden’s King Carl Gustaf XVI in 2012 and is a 2007 Nobel Peace Prize winner (shared with Al Gore) as a member of the United Nations team working on climate change.

He has also served as a senior economist on the Council of Economic Advisers in the White House under the Clinton Administration.

Professor Shogren’s teaching include Global Economic Issues, Natural Resource and Environmental Economics, Environmental Risk and Conflict and Experimental Economics.

Jason is well published with over 200 articles and is the author and editor-in-chief of numerous books including Encyclopedia on Resource, Environmental, and Energy Economics, Experimental Auctions and Fat Economics: Nutrition, Health, and Economic Policy

Jason loves fishing and music. He spends his time composing acoustic roots songs that he describes as catawampus Americana music, has five albums and will be touring this summer.

Economists:

In this interview, Jason mentions and discusses:

Janet Yellen, Thomas Sowell, Daniel Kahneman, Amos Tversky, Gary Becker, Isaac Ehrlich, Ralph C. D’Arge, Tom Crocker, Peter Baum, Karl-Göran Mäler, Vernon Smith and Charlie Plott.

Economic Themes:

In this interview, Jason mentions and discusses:

Carbon tax, cap and trade market, the Coase Theorem, probability, general equilibrium models, expected utility, nudge, rationality, irrationality, risk aversion, loss aversion, homo economicus, soft paternalism, trade-off, scarcity, endogenous risk and extreme tail-end events.

“I spent most of my life before becoming a PhD economist as a musician” -Jason Shogren.

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“I like to think of economics as applied philosophy”- Jason Shogren.

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Find Out:

  • about the Cap and Trade Market for carbon emissions is a failure and would only work in a micro-management setting.
  • why its best to implement a carbon tax.
  • the difference between luxury emissions and survival emissions and why it maybe difficult for China and India to reduce their carbon.
  • how Jason’s depiction of a low probability-high severity event influenced Janet Yellen to take action on climate change.
  • if we are acting rationally or irrationally toward the environment.
  • how we can exploit rationality ‘for the good’.
  • how, over the last 30 years, we have become averse to just about everything.
  • how we can take advantage of peoples’ status quo to increase their contribution of paying a carbon tax.
  • how designing the right system can nudge people to do the right thing – just like soft paternalism.
  • how Jason sought inspiration about rationality from other disciplines, such as English literature and music composition, rather than from economics.
  • how Jason uses music as a form of escapism.
  • about the inspiration Jason gets for writing songs from economics.
  • who the talented people are behind the creation of Jason’s amazing artwork and photography.
  • about the concerts that Jason Shogren will be playing at each year.
  • about Jason’s hitch-hiking experience in Ireland in 1985 from the Giants Causeway and down along the West Coast (now known as the Wild Atlantic Way).
  • about Jason theoretical thought process regarding endogenous risk and  how he applies it to different environmental risks.
  • what Jason would do if he was once again Economic Advisor to the US government.
  • a little about the Endangered Species Act.
  • what I saw on Professor Shogren’s whiteboard when I spoke to him on Skype. Hint: It’s his next economic model.
  • about the 25% chance you have in meeting Jason in Centennial, Wyoming – it involves the population and the number of pubs!
  • about Jason’s plastic Nobel Prize keychain and where he hangs it.

Jason Shogren band

Influencers:

Ralph C. D’Arge, Tom Crocker (Wyoming), Peter Baum (University of Stockholm) , Karl-Göran Mäler, Vernon Smith  and Charlie Plott.

An Economic Theory that Influenced Jason Shogren:

A paper by Ehrlich and Becker on self-protection and self-insurance, i.e. endogenous risk, where people invest to change the lottery they face in life, influenced Professor Shogren’s theoretical approach to economics. Once Jason started looking at economics from that perspective, he began to see a lot of models in which the states of nature where independent. To Jason, that seemed too fatalistic for how we spend our resources and how we invest. Most environmental policies are a lottery because we can’t guarantee that somebody’s going to live or not get sick based on exposure (to environmental risk).

We have an estimate and ‘safe’ minimum standards, but there’s no guarantee. So we’re really talking about policies at a collective level that are moving probabilities and damages around. We also have investment at a private level in which we’re doing the same thing – Jason Shogren

What, therefore, struck Jason was asking people about their value of reducing risk and they giving him a value of zero. He questioned people’s decision of applying a value of zero to reducing risk. The reason was that they valued the ‘collective’ reduction as zero and not their ‘individual’ reduction because they took care of the risk themselves.

Applying this theoretical thought process to climate change, endangered species, health risks, pandemics, invasive species or any other problem, will most likely have some element of endogenous risk. Once you add that element to it, the model gets a little richer and once the model gets a little richer, then you can explain a little more behaviour. By adding the behavioural element to the model, the question is ‘What drives things more? Technology of reducing risk? Tastes? How do they work together or how they work apart?’.

“If you can strip it down to that level, then you can really look at a lot of different problems using that type of kit”– Jason Shogren. It can become very flexible as a theoretical framework and model, that it is the reason why Jason, his peers and his students were able to look at a lot of different problems in terms of endogenous risk. It allows for focus on a particular research topic, otherwise it would be too scattered.

Jason on Carbon Emissions:

“We still have to figure out a Plan B, because there is no Planet B” – Jason Shogren.

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Putting a price on carbon has been the way to reduce carbon emissions. Trying to set up cap and trade markets has been too hard. The cap and trade market has allowed the supply to increase – Jason Shogren.

“If you’re waiting for people to do the right thing for the right reason, you can wait a long time. We’ve seen that throughout history. Economists would say that ‘if you want to do the right thing at the right time, let’s get the prices right and then people will make their own choices’. But if you get prices to reflect true costs and reveal hidden costs that are being imposed on others, then hopefully we don’t have to job-own them and nudge them. Maybe we have to nudge people and get the price right. Both theoretical aspects of economics should be complementary and we should not substitute one for the other” – Jason Shogren.

Before we start calling it nudging, there was a saying “The target is the target and the costs are regrettable but not really decisive” – Thomas Sowell.

Rationality in the Environmental Goods Market:

Rationality in psychology is very different to rationality in economics, in that when we think about rationality in economics we think about a social construct. People are making choices within an active exchange institution like a market and if they start making their emotions run wild, then there are people to arbitrage them. Either they like less money to more or they adjust and they start looking for opportunities themselves. It’s not that we all have to be 100% rational. As long as the folks at the margin who are making those trades pay attention, the market is powerful enough to move it along as if everybody was rational. But they don’t have to be.

The problem with environmental goods is that we don’t have markets like that. So now we have to figure out the problem of how to aggregate up in a way that would incorporate both economic monetary decisions and economic non-monetary decisions. That becomes trickier. Up to quite recently, the only thing economists were dealing with in terms of aversion was risk aversion. Typically it was believed that risk was the only thing that people were averse of. And then Kahneman and Tversky came along and we were now averse to losses and we treated gains and losses differently.

Over the last 30 years, we have become averse to just about everything – ambiguity, inflation aversion, equity aversion, disappointment aversion, envy aversion, lying aversion, guilt aversion. And so by adding all of these emotions into our typical economic model, the question is ‘How and when do we stop?’. Do we add all 40 emotions into our models? And now how do we sort out cross-partial derivatives between equity and envy and disappointment and suspicion and regret? And those are jobs that economists have not been typically trained to deal with – assigning complementarities or substitutabilities between different emotional factors.

So part of this working on nudges is trying to understand that if we tweak the models so that we can take advantage of how people feel guilty about this or how they opt-in or opt-out about different things, we can exploit that irrationality ‘for the good’. For example, people like status quo, so let’s take advantage of that. So instead of buying an airline ticket, nowadays you have to opt-in to add in a carbon price or you can buy a carbon off-set. What we should do is get all the airlines to opt out of buying that carbon off-set. And giving our tendencies not to want to opt out of things, we would probably buy a whole lot more carbon off-sets.

If we can exploit those at the same time as having an active market for those off-sets and a price, then it’s not irrational or rational. It’s understanding that there is some instinctual behaviour that people at a ground level will stick with. That’s the whole soft paternalism idea that we know that you know what’s right and we’re just designing the system to help you get there as opposed to us telling you what’s right.

It is extremely difficult to single out one emotion and to identify it as the one emotion that is driving homo economicus away from our rational base-line. It’s going to take us a while to say ‘Here are the ten big emotions that we can live with and let’s just work on those’.

On Human Behavior:

“If I really want to understand human behaviour, who should I read – Shakespeare or Gary Becker?” – Jason Shogren.

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If we really want to study emotions we should study literature. If you really want to be economical about how people think, then you should study poetry. Then if you want to convey all of that in a compact form that people will pay attention to then you add music. Now you’ve got a melody and lyrics  and you have a path where essentially you are projecting what you are considering to be an important story to tell. Song writing has its structures and its forms that you can easily translate into guidelines and rules and math models, just like we do in economics. To me, arts and science – I don’t know if they’re ying and yang – to me they go parallel and spillover all over each other – Jason Shogren.

What Professor Shogren Would Do Today as Economic Advisor to the US Government:

  1. Figure out a way to introduce a carbon tax but difficulty would lie with the Senate and the House of Representatives since they are essentially run by the Republicans.
  1. Take on the Endangered Species Act because it’s being waiting to be revised for almost 22 years. The way that it is written is that any species has to be protected at any cost. That type pf pressure can’t hold without the economy bursting at the seams. It would be worth going through this Act and add safety valves in a systematic and coherent way. It’s too important for this Act to just sit idly by when people using discretion as to when it holds and when it doesn’t.

josh shogren

Takeaway:

As a younger man, everybody sort of hits that wall of maturity that you don’t really want to go through. Sometime you get forced through it and sometimes you walk through it and sometimes you fall through it. Once you get there and you decide you can’t control the universe, that’s a good place to be – Jason Shogren.

At the same time, you take care of what you can’t control. You know, it’s the oldest story in the book. Once you come to the realisation and you find that balance, things are just way more interesting, way easier to deal with and just, in general, happier. Being a good Scandinavian doesn’t mean I have my gloomy dark moments – Jason Shogren.

Songs Mentioned and Played in this Episode:

  • Works by Jason Shogren
  • Exit In Flames by Jason Shogren
  • Broken Every Vow by Jason Shogren
  • Me and Genghis Khan by Jason Shogren

Concerts Where You Can See Jason Shogren:

  • WHAT fest
  • Nowoodstock
  • Snowy Range

On Ireland:

“I spent a month hitch-hiking in Ireland way back in ’85. I started up in Larne, went up through the Causeway, then all the way down the West coast. It was a great month of hitch-hiking, Guinness, rain, people and adventure. So, yeah, I’m ready to come again” – Jason Shogren.

On Conferences:

“It’s supposed to be fun. You’re supposed to live and learn and try to pass on something better. Sometimes it’s ideas and sometimes it’s ideas through songs” – Jason Shogren.

Musicians Mentioned in this Episode:

  • Mumford and Sons
  • Gordon Barry

Recommended Book:

  • What Work Is by Philip Levine (Poet) 

Where to Find Jason Shogren:

  • Website: www.jshogren.com
  • CDBaby
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035: Stephen Young on Being Car-Free and the Behavioural Economics of Owning A Car

June 4, 2015 by Frank

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035: Stephen Young on Being Car-Free and the Behavioural Economics of Owning A Car

Stephen Young is a Senior Lecturer at Brighton Business School and is subject leader for behavioural economics.Stephen Young

He is also Visiting Lecturer at Brighton and Sussex Medical School, where he teaches Behavioural Economics to health professionals, including commissioners, public health practitioners and GPs.

As an independent consultant and trainer, Stephen also provides client workshops and presentations on behavioural economics and behaviour change.

Stephen is widely published and his research interests include behaviour change, climate change, health, sustainability, and Information and Communications Technology.

Stephen does not own a car and is so passionate about being car free that he writes regularly on his blog livingthecarfreelife.blogspot.com. 

Economists:

In this interview, Stephen mentions and discusses:

Paul Ormerod, Richard Thaler, Cass Sunstein, John Cochrane, Paul Dolan, Malcolm Gladwell, Phil Goodwin, Daniel Kahneman, Adam Smith, Karl Marx, Barry Schwartz, Richard Layard, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Paul Krugman and Friedrich Hayek.

Economic Themes:

In this interview, Stephen mentions and discusses:

Bank run, financial crisis, risk, behavioural economics, nudge, rationality, incentives, tax, choice architecture, obesity, climate change, externalities, loss aversion and the endowment effect.

On Economic Theory:

“None of the models are completely perfect. None of them work to everybody’s benefit” – Stephen Young

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Is behavioural economics storming the citadel or is it shoring up the ramparts? – Stephen Young

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Find Out:

  • why Stephen decided to become an academic.
  • about the Northern Rock bank run in the UK in 2007.
  • why universities need to adapt or die when it comes to addressing relevant content.
  • what Stephen is doing to reduce his carbon footprint in college and how he’s responding to the digital needs of his students.
  • why health professionals are interested in behavioral economics.
  • about the Irish government’s fight against obesity.
  • how Stephen is encouraging a town in the UK to become pedestrian friendly.
  • about framing car ownership – status and perception of rank.
  • how by ditching your car you can burn calories.
  • how the average person is working two days a week to pay for their car.
  • about the emotional attachment that a car represents.
  • what major cities across Europe are doing to make them more pedestrian and bike-friendly.
  • about peak car ownership.
  • some advice from Stephen on how to give up your car and become car free.
  • about the pluralist approach to embracing economics.

“The externalities don’t work for car ownership because it’s not priced in because of the pollution emitted” – Stephen Young

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You can live a better life without a car. You can be thinner. You  can be richer. You can be more sociable. You can be more flexible. You can get around just as easily – Stephen Young.

Reasons for Peak Car Ownership:

  1. The youth do not have the income to finance the ownership of a car due to the high unemployment rates.
  2. High cost of car insurance.
  3. The opportunity costs of owning the latest technology.
  4. You don’t need a car to participate in a lot of things today.

Behavior Economics in the Health Sector:

“We’re not just nudged by the other side, we’re being bombarded by the other side. There’s a lot of room to doubt the way public health policy is being transacted and implemented in a lot of economies” – Stephen Young.

Giving Up Your Car and Becoming Car Free:

  1. Try living without your car for a while before you give up.
  2. If you’re moving house, locate to an area where everything you need is close by.
  3. Don’t give up your car just because it’ll make the world a better place. Only do it to improve your own life.
  4. Take a ‘hike’ – go for a walk.
  5. Walking is a great way of forming your thoughts and ideas as it clears your head and frees your mind.
  6. Walking, rather than driving, improves your health and well-being. It connects you to where you live, to where you are.

“All truly great thoughts are conceived by walking” – Nietzcshe.

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Recommended Books:

  • The Death of Economics by Paul Ormerod
  • Why Most Things Fail: Evolution, Extinction and Economics by Paul Ormerod
  • Nudge by Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein
  • The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell
  • Happiness by Design by Paul Dolan
  • Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
  • The Road to Serfdom by Friedrich Hayek
  • Capital: Volume 1 by Karl Marx
  • Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioural Economics by Richard Thaler
  • Poor Economics by Abhijit V. Banerjee and Esther Duflo
  • Scarcity by Sendil Mullainathan and Eldar Shafir
  • The Structure of Scientific Revolutions by Thomas Kuhn

Where to Find Stephen Young:

  • Website: stephenyoung.org.uk
  • Website: livingthecarfreelife.blogspot.com
  • LinkedIn: Stephen Young
  • Twitter: @stephenyounguk
  • BehaviourWorkshops Twitter: @BehaviourW
  • Behaviour Workshops Blog: http://www.behaviourworkshops.blogspot.co.uk/

Stephen Young’s Publications:

  • Young, S (2013). The Behavioural Economics of Owning A Car. eg magazine. Volume 18, Issue 5, March-April  2013. ISSN 2042-1990.
  • Other Publications.

Forthcoming

  • Young, S. and Caisey, V. Behavioral Economics and Social Marketing: Points of Contact?  Chapter in Volume II of Stewart, D. (Ed) Handbook of Persuasion and Social Marketing. NY: Praeger. 2015.
http://traffic.libsyn.com/economicrockstar/035_Stephen_Young_Final.mp3

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Frank Conway

Frank Conway is founder of Economic Rockstar and lecturer of economics, finance and statistics. Read More…

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Ireland’s Economy by the Numbers

Leaving Cert Economics: Ireland’s Economy  Click here to download a workbook on Ireland’s Economy so that you can add your own notes. [Original size] Ireland’s Economy by fconway

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  • Ireland’s Economy by the Numbers April 8, 2019
  • 174: Wendy Carlin on The Core Project, Capitalism, Democracy and Normative Statements February 13, 2019
  • 173: Stephen Wright on Core Econ as a Learning Resource for Mainstream Economics January 28, 2019
  • 172: Best of 2018 Part 2: From the Great Depression to Futurism; Institutions, Individualism, Cooperation and Reciprocity January 22, 2019
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