Ruggeri, Kai; Panin, Amma; Vdovic, Milica; Veckalov, Bojana; Abdul-Salaam, Nazeer; Achterberg, Jascha; Akil, Carla; Amatya, Jolly; Amatya, Kanchan; Andersen, Thomas Lind; Aquino, Sibele D.; Arunasalam, Arjoon; Ashcroft-Jones, Sarah; Askelund, Adrian Dahl; Ayacaxli, Nelida; Sheshdeh, Aseman Bagheri; Bailey, Alexander; Barea Arroyo, Paula; Mejia, Genaro Basulto; Benvenuti, Martina; Berge, Mari Louise; Bermaganbet, Aliya; Bibilouri, Katherine; Bjorndal, Ludvig Daae; Black, Sabrina; Lyshol, Johanna K. Blomster; Brik, Tymofii; Buabang, Eike Kofi; Burghart, Matthias; Bursalioglu, Asli; Buzayu, Naos Mesfin; Cadek, Martin; de Carvalho, Nathalia Melo; Cazan, Ana-Maria; cetincelik, Melis; Chai, Valentino E.; Chen, Patricia; Chen, Shiyi; Clay, Georgia; D'Ambrogio, Simone; Damnjanovic, Kaja; Duffy, Grace; Dugue, Tatianna; Dwarkanath, Twinkle; Envuladu, Esther Awazzi; Erceg, Nikola; Esteban-Serna, Celia; Farahat, Eman; Farrokhnia, R. A.; Fawad, Mareyba; Fedryansyah, Muhammad; Feng, David; Filippi, Silvia; Fonolla, Matias A.; Freichel, Rene; Freira, Lucia; Friedemann, Maja; Gao, Ziwei; Ge, Suwen; Geiger, Sandra J.; George, Leya; Grabovski, Iulia; Gracheva, Aleksandra; Gracheva, Anastasia; Hajian, Ali; Hasan, Nida; Hecht, Marlene; Hong, Xinyi; Hubena, Barbora; Ikonomeas, Alexander Gustav Fredriksen; Ilic, Sandra; Izydorczyk, David; Jakob, Lea; Janssens, Margo; Jarke, Hannes; Kacha, Ondrej; Kalinova, Kalina Nikolova; Kapingura, Forget Mingiri; Karakasheva, Ralitsa; Kasdan, David Oliver; Kemel, Emmanuel; Khorrami, Peggah; Krawiec, Jakub M.; Lagidze, Nato; Lazarevic, Aleksandra; Lazic, Aleksandra; Lee, Hyung Seo; Lep, Zan; Lins, Samuel; Lofthus, Ingvild Sando; Macchia, Lucia; Mamede, Salome; Mamo, Metasebiya Ayele; Maratkyzy, Laura; Mareva, Silvana; Marwaha, Shivika; McGill, Lucy; McParland, Sharon; Melnic, Anisoara; Meyer, Sebastian A.; Mizak, Szymon; Mohammed, Amina; Mukhyshbayeva, Aizhan; Navajas, Joaquin; Neshevska, Dragana; Niazi, Shehrbano Jamali; Nieves, Ana Elsa Nieto; Nippold, Franziska; Oberschulte, Julia; Otto, Thiago; Pae, Riinu; Panchelieva, Tsvetelina; Park, Sun Young; Pascu, Daria Stefania; Pavlovic, Irena; Petrovic, Marija B.; Popovic, Dora; Prinz, Gerhard M.; Rachev, Nikolay R.; Ranc, Pika; Razum, Josip; Rho, Christina Eun; Riitsalu, Leonore; Rocca, Federica; Rosenbaum, R. Shayna; Rujimora, James; Rusyidi, Binahayati; Rutherford, Charlotte; Said, Rand; Sanguino, Ines; Sarikaya, Ahmet Kerem; Say, Nicolas; Schuck, Jakob; Shiels, Mary; Shir, Yarden; Sievert, Elisabeth D. C.; Soboleva, Irina; Solomonia, Tina; Soni, Siddhant; Soysal, Irem; Stablum, Federica; Sundstrom, Felicia T. A.; Tang, Xintong; Tavera, Felice; Taylor, Jacqueline; Tebbe, Anna-Lena; Thommesen, Katrine Krabbe; Tobias-Webb, Juliette; Todsen, Anna Louise; Toscano, Filippo; Tran, Tran; Trinh, Jason; Turati, Alice; Ueda, Kohei; Vacondio, Martina; Vakhitov, Volodymyr; Valencia, Adrianna J.; Reyn, Chiara van; Venema, Tina A. G.; Verra, Sanne E.; Vintr, Jachym; Vranka, Marek A.; Wagner, Lisa; Wu, Xue; Xing, Ke Ying; Xu, Kailin; Xu, Sonya; Yamada, Yuki; Yosifova, Aleksandra; Zupan, Zorana and Garcia-Garzon, Eduardo
(2022):
The globalizability of temporal discounting.
In: Nature Human Behaviour, Vol. 6, No. 10: pp. 1386-1397
Full text not available from 'Open Access LMU'.
Abstract
Economic inequality is associated with preferences for smaller, immediate gains over larger, delayed ones. Such temporal discounting may feed into rising global inequality, yet it is unclear whether it is a function of choice preferences or norms, or rather the absence of sufficient resources for immediate needs. It is also not clear whether these reflect true differences in choice patterns between income groups. We tested temporal discounting and five intertemporal choice anomalies using local currencies and value standards in 61 countries (N = 13,629). Across a diverse sample, we found consistent, robust rates of choice anomalies. Lower-income groups were not significantly different, but economic inequality and broader financial circumstances were clearly correlated with population choice patterns. Ruggeri et al. find in a study of 61 countries that temporal discounting patterns are globally generalizable. Worse financial environments, greater inequality and high inflation are associated with extreme or inconsistent long-term decisions.
Item Type: |
Journal article
|
Faculties: |
Physics |
Subjects: |
500 Science > 530 Physics |
ISSN: |
2397-3374 |
Language: |
English |
Item ID: |
112630 |
Date Deposited: |
02. Apr 2024, 07:38 |
Last Modified: |
02. Apr 2024, 07:38 |
Actions (login required)
- View Item
