1 / 94

Psychology of Poverty

Psychology of Poverty. Lecture 5, Economics 2030 Sendhil Mullainathan. Aside: Two Dominant Views of Poverty. Rational Choice view Consistency, Willpower, Well-defined preferences,.. Behavior: calculated adaptation to prevailing circumstances This example illustrates an anomaly for this view

kolton
Download Presentation

Psychology of Poverty

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Psychology of Poverty Lecture 5, Economics 2030 Sendhil Mullainathan

  2. Aside: Two Dominant Views of Poverty • Rational Choice view • Consistency, Willpower, Well-defined preferences,.. • Behavior: calculated adaptation to prevailing circumstances • This example illustrates an anomaly for this view • Pathology view • Psychological pathologies specific to the poor • Impatient, no planning, confused • Behaviors endemic to “culture of poverty”

  3. Psychologically Richer Alternatives • Same behaviors; different interpretations • Rich are fallible; poor are equally fallible • Attention is just greater on fallibility of rich • Different challenges; same basic psychology • Will work through one model carefully • Different challenges; different psychology

  4. Psychologically Richer Alternatives • Same behaviors; different interpretations • Rich are fallible; poor are equally fallible • Attention is just greater on fallibility of rich • Bertrand, Mullainathan and Shafir • Different challenges; same basic psychology • Will work through one model carefully • Different challenges; different psychology

  5. Psychological Perspective • Large body of decision research (among the “comfortable”): • Biases in decision making • Limited willpower • Malleable preferences • Channel factors • Operating assumption: • Rich and poor have similar psychological make-ups • Same behaviors in fact (e.g. give in to defaults) • The consequences are differently interpreted

  6. Example Psychology: Power of Context • Darley and Batson • Recruited seminary students to deliver practice sermon on the parable of Good Samaritan • After completing surveys, told to go to another building for the sermon • Half (“Rushed”) were led to believe they were running late

  7. Psychology: Power of Context • On the way to give talk, all participants passed an ostensibly injured man slumped in a doorway, coughing and groaning. • Key DV: Would individual stop?

  8. Psychology: Power of Context • Outcome: • No hurry 63% helped, • Medium hurry 45% • High hurry 10% • Notice: • These are priests…ironically giving a lecture on the good samaritan • Key insight: • Channel factors. Facilitate good behaviors

  9. Implications of this insight • Revealed preference: • Outcomes do not reflect “deep” preferences • Situational factors can drive decisions • Design of institutions

  10. Poor versus Rich • Why might common failings such as these lead the poor to be more affected than the rich? • Different institutions • Different problems/circumstances • Example application • Financial Services

  11. Role of Institutions • Shape defaults • Provide implicit planning

  12. Defaults

  13. Institutions Shape default • Power of direct deposit • Default translates from cash in hand to cash in account • Must take active step to withdraw certain amount of money • Gives simple perspective on how direct deposit could have very large consequences for behavior • Suggests simple policy intervention

  14. Unbanked • Why remain unbanked? • Channel factors? • The Federal Reserve Bank conducted a study in 2000 that asked un-banked families why they didn’t have a checking account. Among top reasons: Do not like dealing with banks. • What if…Unbanked due to: • Nuisances (sneers from teller, no babysitter…), • unfamiliarity, conscious violation of social norms • How do we reduce channel factors?

  15. Bertrand, Mullainathan and Shafir • Phone survey of individuals that participated in the financial education workshops starting November 2002: • Entire population (900) sampled • 200 surveys completed • Attempt at experimental design over the summer of 2004: • “Bank representative” presence • Educational component of workshop • 3 experimental groups: • Only bank representative • Only financial education • Bank representative+financial education • 50 or so people in each group • 90 phone surveys completed • Access to bank account information for individuals in each group

  16. Reasons for not Opening an Account • Very satisfied about program • 90 percent reported planning to open an account at time left the workshop • Why not opening then? • For up to a third: forgot, deadline expired, lost referral letter, etc…

  17. Summary • Prior program proved of limited effectiveness (<50% take-up.) • Follow-up surveys: 90% intended to, but forgot, misplaced the relevant forms, etc… • 2-hour long workshop; If workshop participant interested in FA: • Referral letter to take to the bank, OR • Sign up on site if bank representative present at the workshop • Presence of a bank representative: significantly increased opening and keeping an account, and decreased check cashing, and borrowing from family. • Take-up: ~8 percentage points higher among those who voluntarily attended workshop. Take up: ~10 percentage points higher among those who attended workshop where a Shorebank representative was present. • (Can compare accounts opened at financial educ. workshop vs. tax prep. sites: No significant differences in closure rates, or in monthly usage patterns) • Cf., Retirement Savings; “Save More Tomorrow” (Benartzi & Thaler)

  18. Deeper Issue • How do we encourage private sector to remove channel factors? • Key policy observation: • Channel factors are largely unobservable by regulator • Suggests outcome regulation rather than input regulation

  19. Benefits of Banking • Perspective also suggests something else: • Why being unbanked can have big consequences • Cash on hand vs. in account • Help with planning • Access to other financial services that provide implicit planning and other automatic behavior

  20. Psychologically Richer Alternatives • Same behaviors; different interpretations • Rich are fallible; poor are equally fallible • Attention is just greater on fallibility of rich • Different challenges; same basic psychology • Will work through one model carefully • Different challenges; different psychology

  21. A Motivating Fact • The poor borrow at very high rates • Aleem: average interest rate 78% • MFIs in Mexico: 90%+ per year • Informal crop finance in our sample: 10-12% for 3 months • This is not just for coping with shocks • Many theories focus on supply side (e.g. monopoly, monitoring costs) • But what does consistent borrowing at these rates imply for the demand side?

  22. Vegetable Vendors – Stark Example • Simple production function • Purchase fruit in the early morning • Sell through day • Basic working capital needs Karlan Mullainathan

  23. Fruit Vendor

  24. Vendors • Simple production function • Purchase fruit in the early morning • Sell through day • Basic working capital needs

  25. Vendors

  26. Vendors

  27. Intertemporal substitution • Recall basic Euler equation for someone borrowing at rate R • Basic intuition: • People can always borrow less and finance out of their own consumption.

  28. Implications of high interest rate • Discount future heavily (δ low) or • Future marginal utility large relative to today • Consumption growth large • u’(ct+1) low so ct+1 high • Note: this is stronger than saying that marginal product of capital is high. • Some existing studies suggest this as well. • Particularly sensible for transitory shocks (e.g. health). • But examples span even working capital uses (e.g. crop finance)

  29. Vendors • Persistent borrowers • At very high rates • Stark implication: • One less cup of tea a day. • In 30 days will have doubled income. • Significant foregone income • Is this a rationale for consumer protection? • Tempted to debt?

  30. Vendors Problem not unique • Payday Loans • Skiba Tobacman, 18% for loans lasting two weeks • People take many loans before defaulting • In essence paying the entire amount on their cycle before defaulting • Many other apparently myopic behaviors • Drug adherence

  31. Understanding Poverty • To fit these facts current models must assume Poor are very myopic or Poor are quickly becoming non-poor • Since the latterappears counter-factual, we are forced to conclude the former

  32. How to incorporate psychological insights? • Time inconsistency obviously helpful in resolving myopia tension • Standard model conceptualizes it as δ low • Present bias literature suggests more nuanced view • Individuals have inconsistent time preferences • Can be both myopic and farsighted • Two ways to incorporate time inconsistency • Constant time-inconsistency • Inconsistency problems which vary with income • Need simple framework to do both

  33. Banerjee-Mullainathan • Question: Do time inconsistent preferences help explain phenomena of poverty? • Impose richer structure on temptation than just time inconsistency • Note: Intra-family conflict may generate similar results. Abstract from source of time inconsistency for now • Derive implications for: • Wealth dynamics (poverty traps) • Response to uncertainty • Savings behavior • Investment choices • Debt as a temptation • Money Lender Behavior

  34. Nature of Self-Control • Time inconsistency often conveniently measured in money or total consumption • Tension is between how much now and how much later

  35. Choosing Movies Read, Loewenstein & Kalyanaraman (1999) • Subjects given opportunity to choose a movie video from a set of 24 titles • Four Weddings and a Funeral • Schindler’s List • When choosing for today: 56% choose low-brow • When choosing for next Monday, 37% choose low-brow • When choosing for second Monday, 29% choose low-brow

  36. Temptation goods • Suggests conflict not just in how much is consumed but what is consumed • Cigarette smoking • Unhealthy foods • Will assume “sophistication” in consumption • Not essential to our analysis

  37. Assumptions • Two periods in most examples • Two types of index goods: x and z • x consumption: no time inconsistency • z consumption: only present selves like it • Instantaneous utility in each period u(x) + v(z) • Period 1’s decision utility: • Income each period yt and initial wealth w0 • Production function f(). Sometimes for simplicity will just assume rate of return R

  38. Relation to Hyperbolic Model • Contrast two models • Equivalent in case where • For example same CRRA function

  39. Re-interpretation of Hyperbolic Model • In other words the simple hyperbolic model on consumption assumes that temptations scale with regular consumption • This implies that relation between temptation and income (consumption level) is rather complicated • Consistent with present-bias broadly embodied in hyperbolic models • Goods provide certain amounts of now and later utils. Underlying psychology may still be about now versus later • Key is having a model that allows the explicit breakdown of goods according to “now”ness

  40. Useful Lemma • Lemma: For any continuous and increasing z(x) and u(x) there exists a v(z) such that the optimal z consumption is defined by z(x) • Proof: u′(x)=v′(z(x)). DefineThen • Implication: Can think in terms of z(x) as primitive

  41. Generalized Euler Equation • Traditional Euler Equation: • Generalized Euler Equation • Temptation tax: • Every dollar transferred into the future is “taxed” by temptations; future selves will waste some of it.

  42. Poverty and Myopia • Two forms of “myopia”: δ and z’(w) • Original puzzle • Third explanation: myopia in the form of high z’(w). • Why is this different? • Because z’(w) can vary systematically with w • Individuals can control the value of z’(w) they face and hence the tax. • All our results come from this. • These considerations that traditional estimations of discount rates be biased

  43. The shape of temptation • Two important cases: • z’(c) constant (Non Declining temptation) • Rich and poor face similar time inconsistency problems • Includes case of z’(c) = 0 • z’(c) declining • Rich face less time inconsistency problems

  44. Implications of constant z’ • Useful applied insights • No different than applying standard models (e.g. hyperbolic)

  45. Example applications • Demand for Commitment • SEED, ROSCAs • Purchase of Durables • Suppose durables provide fixed x utility • Individuals willingness to pay for durables will be • If discount factors on consumption or investment data assuming a traditional Euler equation, individuals will appear to over-demand durables relative to investments

  46. Demand for durables • By over-investing enough in durables the current decision-maker locks in future x consumption (assuming that durables generate u consumption.

  47. What is a Temptation? • Demand for commitment devices also tells us potentially what is a x-good? • People would only save up (in a commitment device or otherwise) to buy an x-good.

More Related