Is there a development gap in rationality?
Working paper
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http://hdl.handle.net/11250/194527Utgivelsesdato
2014-03Metadata
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Sammendrag
We report an experimental test of the four touchstones of rationality in choice
under risk – utility maximization, stochastic dominance, expected-utility maximization
and small-stakes risk neutrality – with students from one of the best
universities in the United States and one of the best universities in Africa, the
University of Dar es Salaam. Although the US and the Tanzanian subjects come
from different backgrounds and face different economic prospects, they are united
by being among the most able in their societies. Importantly, many of whom will
exercise an outsized influence over economic and political affairs. We find very
small or no significant differences between the two samples in the degree of rationality
according to a number of standard economic measures. An alternative
approach is to take cognitive ability (IQ) as a proxy for economic rationality. We
show that a canonical IQ test indicates a much larger development gap in rationality
relative to our economic tests.