The Value Function with Life Satisfaction Data

Publikation: Working paperForskning

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The Value Function with Life Satisfaction Data. / Kanninen, Ohto; Mahler, Daniel Gerszon.

2017.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Kanninen, O & Mahler, DG 2017 'The Value Function with Life Satisfaction Data'.

APA

Kanninen, O., & Mahler, D. G. (2017). The Value Function with Life Satisfaction Data.

Vancouver

Kanninen O, Mahler DG. The Value Function with Life Satisfaction Data. 2017.

Author

Kanninen, Ohto ; Mahler, Daniel Gerszon. / The Value Function with Life Satisfaction Data. 2017.

Bibtex

@techreport{3a2aba39056b46b3941552486228a276,
title = "The Value Function with Life Satisfaction Data",
abstract = "Prospect theory and its empirical applications have shown that in some contexts people make choices based on the value of those choices relative to a reference point. The resulting mapping from outcomes to utility is called the value function and it exhibits loss aversion and diminishing sensitivity. These properties make the value function an S-curve with a kink at the reference point. In this paper, we use the German Socio-Economic Panel (n > 250; 000) to test whether the properties of the value function extend from narrow gambling choices in experiments to yearly changes in earnings evaluated with life satisfaction. We nd that the mapping from changes in earnings to life satisfaction mimics the predicted S-curve remarkably well when the reference point is generated from individuals' past earnings. This nding is robust to a large set of alternative specications. In congruence with experimental evidence, we nd that earnings losses have around 2 times greater impact on life satisfaction than earnings gains. We emphasize that the S-curve we nd need not be causal, since the changes in earnings were based on observational data. However, we can rule out that certain other factors produced the observed relationship, including expected utility theory.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Prospect theory, loss aversion, life satisfaction, subjective well-being, D03, D60, I31",
author = "Ohto Kanninen and Mahler, {Daniel Gerszon}",
year = "2017",
language = "English",
type = "WorkingPaper",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - The Value Function with Life Satisfaction Data

AU - Kanninen, Ohto

AU - Mahler, Daniel Gerszon

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Prospect theory and its empirical applications have shown that in some contexts people make choices based on the value of those choices relative to a reference point. The resulting mapping from outcomes to utility is called the value function and it exhibits loss aversion and diminishing sensitivity. These properties make the value function an S-curve with a kink at the reference point. In this paper, we use the German Socio-Economic Panel (n > 250; 000) to test whether the properties of the value function extend from narrow gambling choices in experiments to yearly changes in earnings evaluated with life satisfaction. We nd that the mapping from changes in earnings to life satisfaction mimics the predicted S-curve remarkably well when the reference point is generated from individuals' past earnings. This nding is robust to a large set of alternative specications. In congruence with experimental evidence, we nd that earnings losses have around 2 times greater impact on life satisfaction than earnings gains. We emphasize that the S-curve we nd need not be causal, since the changes in earnings were based on observational data. However, we can rule out that certain other factors produced the observed relationship, including expected utility theory.

AB - Prospect theory and its empirical applications have shown that in some contexts people make choices based on the value of those choices relative to a reference point. The resulting mapping from outcomes to utility is called the value function and it exhibits loss aversion and diminishing sensitivity. These properties make the value function an S-curve with a kink at the reference point. In this paper, we use the German Socio-Economic Panel (n > 250; 000) to test whether the properties of the value function extend from narrow gambling choices in experiments to yearly changes in earnings evaluated with life satisfaction. We nd that the mapping from changes in earnings to life satisfaction mimics the predicted S-curve remarkably well when the reference point is generated from individuals' past earnings. This nding is robust to a large set of alternative specications. In congruence with experimental evidence, we nd that earnings losses have around 2 times greater impact on life satisfaction than earnings gains. We emphasize that the S-curve we nd need not be causal, since the changes in earnings were based on observational data. However, we can rule out that certain other factors produced the observed relationship, including expected utility theory.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Prospect theory

KW - loss aversion

KW - life satisfaction

KW - subjective well-being

KW - D03

KW - D60

KW - I31

M3 - Working paper

BT - The Value Function with Life Satisfaction Data

ER -

ID: 174399800