988 resultados para Economic Behavior.
Resumo:
Este trabajo presenta un estudio de caso de perdurabilidad empresarial de la empresa Casa Dental Eduardo Daza Ltda, que como Empresa de Familia, desafía la tendencia de su desaparición a partir de la tercera generación, como lo han hecho la mayoría de empresas de esta naturaleza a nivel mundial. En primera instancia se contextualiza y caracteriza las empresas de familia a nivel mundial a partir de una revisión de la literatura existente, para poder consolidar un marco referencial que permite una aproximación al estado del arte en el ámbito corporativo de empresas de naturaleza familiar, para luego analizar su dinámica actual en la economía colombiana, en un enfoque desde lo general a lo particular. Posteriormente se presenta las características que demarcan el éxito de las empresas de familia, su gestión y gobernabilidad, el protocolo de traspaso y el direccionamiento estratégico hacia la innovación como sinónimo que garantiza la perdurabilidad en el tiempo. Después de esta contextualización, se presenta las particularidades desde un contexto histórico de la empresa Casa Dental Eduardo Daza Ltda, sus vicisitudes corporativas, su decadencia y renacer, hasta convertirse en un caso de éxito empresarial a nivel de empresa de familia, sustentando en su comportamiento económico financiero en los últimos tres años, para poder definir sus particularidades, tendencias y prospectiva en el inmediato futuro. Se concluye que las empresas de familia como forma más antigua de organización empresarial, tienen un amplio reconocimiento como un actor importante y diferenciador de la economía mundial, pues el aparato productivos de muchos países desarrollados y en vías de desarrollo se soporta en empresas de familia. La evidencia empírica señala dos características distintivas de las empresas de familia: 1) en casi todos los países estas empresas tienen una alta participación en la creación de riqueza; y 2) tienen una alta probabilidad de desaparecer. En todas las economías, en mayor o menor grado, conviven estos dos fenómenos tan significativos: su importancia económica y su vulnerabilidad
Resumo:
Previous research has shown that often there is clear inertia in individual decision making---that is, a tendency for decision makers to choose a status quo option. I conduct a laboratory experiment to investigate two potential determinants of inertia in uncertain environments: (i) regret aversion and (ii) ambiguity-driven indecisiveness. I use a between-subjects design with varying conditions to identify the effects of these two mechanisms on choice behavior. In each condition, participants choose between two simple real gambles, one of which is the status quo option. I find that inertia is quite large and that both mechanisms are equally important.
Resumo:
We examine spending on consumption items which have signaling value in social interactions across groups with distinctive social identities in India, where social identities are defined by caste and religious affiliations. Using nationally representative micro data on household consumption expenditures, we find that disadvantaged caste groups such as Other Backward Castes spend 8 percent more on visible consumption than Brahmin and High Caste groups while social groups such as Muslims spend 14 percent less, after controlling for differences in permanent income, household assets and household demographic composition. The differences across social groups are significant and robust and these differences persist within different sub populations. We find that the higher spending of OBC households on visible consumption is diverted from education spending, while Muslim households divert spending from visible consumption and education towards greater food spending. Additionally, we find that these consumption patterns can be partly explained as a result of the status signaling nature of the consumption items. We also discuss alternative sources of differences in consumption patterns across groups which stem from religious observance.
Resumo:
We analyze experimental data obtained from an ultimatum game framed as a situation of employee-employer negotiation over salaries. Parallel to this, we elicit subjects' risk attitudes. In the existing literature, it has often been conjectured that gender differences in strategic environments are partly due to differences in risky decision making. Our evidence suggests that both gender and risk-related effects co-exist in ultimatum bargaining. However, differences in risk attitudes cannot explain gender effects in ultimatum bargaining.
Resumo:
We apply experimental methods to study the role of risk aversion on players’ behavior in repeated prisoners’ dilemma games. Faced with quantitatively equal discount factors, the most risk-averse players will choose Nash strategies more often in the presence of uncertainty than when future profits are discounted in a deterministic way. Overall, we find that risk aversion relates negatively with the frequency of collusive outcomes.
Resumo:
This paper studies the economic behavior of agents, who make decisions regarding the sustainability of Common-Pool Resources (CPR). For this purpose, economic experiments are applied to simulate the yield of a CPR, taking into account the influence of economics training on the learning process of individuals, regarding their decisions for sustainability. Based on a non-cooperative game with simultaneous choices, the results of experiments show that after several rounds the existence of economics knowledge reflects a better learning process for making decisions regarding sustainability of CPR.
Resumo:
We conduct the first empirical economic investigation of the decision to cheat by University students. We investigate student demand for essays, using hypothetical discrete choice experiments in conjunction with consequential Holt-Laury gambles to derive subjects risk preferences. Students stated willingness to participate in the essay market, and their valuation of purchased essays, vary with the characteristics of student and institutional environment. Risk preferring students, those working in a non-native language, and those believing they will attain a lower grade are willing to pay more. Purchase likelihoods and essay valuations decline as the probability of detection and associated penalty increase.
Resumo:
This paper examines how different aspects of multinational experience affect the choice of international linkage strategy. Integrating transaction cost and dynamic efficiency considerations, we empirically test the determinants of the choice between acquisitions, joint ventures (JV), and strategic alliances (SA) for the world’s largest electronics corporations in 1993–1997. We show that “country specific experience” increases the probability of commitment intensive linkage modes (such as acquisitions and joint ventures), while a positive effect on strategic alliances is caused by “variety experience”, deriving from the heterogeneity of international contexts, and by “internationalisation experience” reflecting overall involvement in international markets.
Resumo:
Testosterone has pronounced effects on men’s physiological development and smaller, more nuanced, impacts on their economic behavior. In this study of 1199 Australian adult males, we investigate the relationship between the self-employed and their serum testosterone levels. Because prior studies have identified that testosterone is a hormone that is responsive to external factors (e.g. competition, risk-taking), we explicitly control for omitted variable bias and reverse causality by using an instrumental variable approach. We use insulin as our primary instrument to account for endogeneity between testosterone and self-employment. This is because prior research has identified a relationship between insulin and testosterone but not between insulin and self-employment. Our results show that there is a positive association between total testosterone and self-employment. Robustness checks using bioavailable testosterone and another similar instrument (daily alcohol consumption) confirm this positive finding.
Resumo:
Classic financial agency theory recommends compensation through stock options rather than shares to counteract excessive risk aversion in agents. In a setting where any kind of risk taking is suboptimal for shareholders, we show that excessive risk taking may occur for one of two reasons: risk preferences or incentives. Even when compensated through restricted company stock, experimental CEOs take large amounts of excessive risk. This contradicts classical financial theory, but can be explained through risk preferences that are not uniform over the probability and outcome spaces, and in particular, risk seeking for small probability gains and large probability losses. Compensation through options further increases risk taking as expected. We show that this effect is driven mainly by the personal asset position of the experimental CEO, thus having deleterious effects on company performance.
Resumo:
O objetivo desta pesquisa é o de discutir o processo de aprendizagem na teoria econômica, especialmente na macroeconomia; assim como as conseqüências, para a política econômica, de considerar-se tal processo um importante elemento nas decisões econômicas.
Resumo:
Este estudo tem por objetivo examinar o processo de internacionalização da Brahma. uma empresa brasileira, em um ambiente especifico, denominado MERCOSUL, assim como também outros espaços na América Latina; sob uma perspectiva econômico-comportamental. que pode condicionar a tomada de decisão de internacionalização e a opção do modo de entrada da empresa no mercado externo. O método de pesquisa adotado foi o estudo de caso. Devido à natureza exploratória do estudo, a abordagem de coleta de dados foi a entrevista em profundidade, dada a escassez de outras fontes confiáveis a que se pudesse recorrer. Os resultados propiciaram uma avaliação das proposições estudadas na literatura, permitindo a confimlação de algumas já existentes e abrindo caminho para pesquisas futuras no processo de internacionalização.
Resumo:
Esta dissertação foi desenvolvida da seguinte forma: No item I - Introdução, se mostra como foi constatado que os indivíduos, em experimentos, não se comportavam como simples maximizadores de quantidades, e são citadas as primeiras teorias explicativas dos comportamentos encontrados. Nos itens 11 e I1I, se mostra a evolução histórica da Teoria dos Jogos e da Economia Experimental, a partir da publicação de "Theory of Games and Economic Behavior". No item IV, são apresentados conceitos básicos de Teoria dos Jogos, formas de jogos, soluções e equilíbrio. No item V são apresentados conceitos de barganha e é discutido o equilíbrio em barganha. São apresentados, também, os Jogos do Ultimato e do Ditador, os quais servirão de base para comparação das duas teorias citadas, posteriormente, no item VIII. No item VI são apresentados as condições necessárias e os procedimentos adequados para a realização de experimentos em Economia. No item VII são relacionados alguns experimentos realizados, em condições distintas, com Jogos do Ultimato e Ditador e, seus resultados e conclusões são analisados. No item VIII são apresentados os Modelos de Preferências Sociais e, em especial, a Teoria da AversclO â Iniquidade e o Equilíbrio de Justiça Recíproca. No item IX é descrito o experimento proposto e sua motivação - réplica a uma assertiva de Chamess e Rabin (2002) quanto à possível igualdade de resultados em jogos realizados sob formas simultânea e seqüencial. No item X Conclusão, se faz uma comparação entre a Teoria da AversZío á Iniqüidade e a Teoria de Equilíbrio de Justiça Recíproca.
Resumo:
Unlike the methodological sciences such as mathematics and decision theory, which use the hypothetical-deductive method and may be fully expressed in complex mathematical models because their only truth criterion is logical consistency, the substantive sciences have as their truth criterion the correspondence to reality, adopt an empirical-deductive method, and are supposed to generalize from and often unreliable regularities and tendencies. Given this assumption, it is very difficult for economists to predict economic behavior, particularly major financial crises.