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Matilde Bombardini, Francesco Trebbi, Risk Aversion and Expected Utility Theory: An Experiment with Large and Small Stakes, Journal of the European Economic Association, Volume 10, Issue 6, 1 December 2012, Pages 1348–1399, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1542-4774.2012.01086.x
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Abstract
We employ a novel data set to estimate a structural econometric model of the decisions under risk of players in a game show where lotteries present payoffs in excess of half a million dollars. The decisions under risk of players in the presence of large payoffs allow us to estimate the parameters of the curvature of the von Neumann–Morgenstern utility function—not only locally, as in previous studies in the literature, but also globally. Our estimates of relative risk aversion indicate that a constant relative risk aversion parameter of about 1 captures the average of the sample population. We also find that individuals are practically risk neutral at small stakes and risk averse at large stakes—a necessary condition, according to Rabin’s calibration theorem, for expected utility to provide a unified account of individuals’ attitudes toward risk. Finally, we show that for lotteries characterized by substantial stakes, nonexpected utility theories fit the data equally as well as expected utility theory.