Publication: Rationality and honesty of consumers in insurance decisions
Loading...
Identifiers
Publication date
Reading date
Event date
Start date of the public exhibition period
End date of the public exhibition period
Authors
Advisors
Authors of photography
Person who provides the photography
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
In this paper we design an experimental study to test two conventional theoretical assumptions regarding insurance consumer decision making under uncertainty: the purchase of insurance with premiums that guarantee an increase in expected utility, and the preference for a greater level of coverage given a greater level of risk (a larger expected loss) at constant premiums. We find that the first assumption is fully supported by our experimental study, but we do not find any evidence to support the theoretical relationship between coverage and expected loss. The experimental study also allowed us to check the honesty of consumers with insurance contracts. The results point to a persistence of honest behaviour that cannot be explained by criteria of pure economic rationality. The explication for such behaviour must reside in the role other issues like traditions, accepted behavioral customs, ethics and even gender, which therefore must also be important for decision making under uncertainty.
Doctoral program
Related publication
Research projects
Description
Bibliographic reference
Journal of Economics and Business, Volume 89, January–February 2017, Pages 36-46






