Who should exert more effort? Risk aversion, downside risk aversion and optimal prevention

I provide new results on how risk preferences affect optimal prevention. I identify a comparative risk aversion and a comparative downside risk aversion effect and highlight those cases where both effects are aligned. Alignment depends on a probability threshold, which, in turn, only depends on the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Economic theory 2021-06, Vol.71 (4), p.1259-1281
1. Verfasser: Peter, Richard
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:I provide new results on how risk preferences affect optimal prevention. I identify a comparative risk aversion and a comparative downside risk aversion effect and highlight those cases where both effects are aligned. Alignment depends on a probability threshold, which, in turn, only depends on the preferences of the benchmark agent. This allows to define an entire class of decision-makers who all share the same comparative static prediction relative to the reference agent. I relate my findings to different intensity measures of downside risk aversion and apply them to parametric preference changes and specific classes of utility functions.
ISSN:0938-2259
1432-0479
DOI:10.1007/s00199-020-01282-0