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Original Articles

Skewed background risks and higher-order risk preferences: prudent versus temperate behavior

 

ABSTRACT

In recent economic experiments, lotteries with left-skewed background risks elicit more prudent choices than lotteries with right-skewed background risks. In this letter, we use an expected utility framework to show that a skewed zero-mean background risk may induce not only prudent but also temperate behaviour. We suggest that the experimental findings could also be due to temperance, rather than merely to prudence.

JEL CLASSIFICATION:

Acknowledgements

This work benefited from comments by Stefan Felder and Miriam Krieger.

Disclosure statement

There are no financial or personal conflicts of interest.

Notes

1 Kimball (Citation1990) coined the term prudence for third-order risk aversion and Kimball (Citation1992) introduced the term temperance for fourth-order risk aversion.

2 Left-skewness (right-skewness) of a zero-mean risk implies that the bad outcome has a lower (higher) probability but a larger (smaller) magnitude than the good outcome.

3 Note that while the second derivative is negative, it is increasing in w since the third derivative is positive.

4 To avoid redundancy we will only discuss the impact of prudence and temperance given a skewed background risk but not of imprudence or intemperance.

5 Coebergh et al. (Citation1999) studied 34,000 Dutch cancer patients between 1993 and 1996 and found co-morbid conditions to increase in age from a presence in 12% of patients under 45 to 63% in patients over 75. While this result underlines the importance of considering comorbidity (risk) per se, it also shows that comorbidity risk can be distributed in several ways (here: left-skewed for younger and right-skewed for older cohorts).

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