The market for preferences
Contribuinte(s) |
Newton A. |
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Data(s) |
01/01/2004
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Resumo |
Learning processes are widely held to be the mechanism by which boundedly rational agents adapt to environmental changes. We argue that this same outcome might also be achieved by a different mechanism, namely specialisation and the division of knowledge, which we here extend to the consumer side of the economy. We distinguish between high-level preferences and low-level preferences as nested systems of rules used to solve particular choice problems. We argue that agents, while sovereign in high-level preferences, may often find it expedient to acquire, in a pseudo-market, the low-level preferences in order to make good choices when purchasing complex commodities about which they have little or no experience. A market for preferences arises when environmental complexity overwhelms learning possibilities and leads agents to make use of other people's specialised knowledge and decision rules. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Oxford University Press |
Palavras-Chave | #Economics #Preferences #Learning #Knowledge #Bounded Rationality #Choice Theory #Consumer Behaviour #Evolutionary Economics #Consumption #Psychology #Rules #C1 #340102 Macroeconomic Theory #720202 Consumption |
Tipo |
Journal Article |