Ambiguity and self-protection: evidence from social distancing under the COVID-19 pandemic

被引:0
作者
Daiki Kishishita
Hans H. Tung
Charlotte Wang
机构
[1] Tokyo University of Science,School of Management
[2] National Taiwan University,Department of Political Science
[3] National Taiwan University,Center for Research in Econometric Theory and Applications
[4] Columbia University,Department of Statistics
来源
The Japanese Economic Review | 2024年 / 75卷
关键词
Scientific uncertainty; Ambiguity; Self-protection; Preventive behaviors; COVID-19; D80; D81; I12;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
This paper studies how people make decisions over preventive behaviors under ambiguity (i.e., Knightian uncertainty) where they do not even know the probability of a loss. In the context of the current COVID-19 pandemic, scientific uncertainty makes it hard to evaluate not only whether one will be infected, but also probabilities such as the infection rate. We constructed a simple model and demonstrated how its effect was heterogeneous depending on ambiguity-attitudes. Motivated by the model, we further conducted a survey experiment in Japan where we manipulated the information regarding scientific uncertainty on COVID-19. We found that higher ambiguity induced by scientific uncertainty increased the level of social distancing among ambiguity-loving people, but such evidence was nonexistent for ambiguity-averse counterparts.
引用
收藏
页码:269 / 300
页数:31
相关论文
共 86 条
  • [1] Alary D(2013)The effect of ambiguity aversion on insurance and self-protection The Economic Journal 123 1188-1202
  • [2] Gollier C(2018)Intergenerational mobility and preferences for redistribution American Economic Review 108 521-554
  • [3] Treich N(2019)Measuring ambiguity preferences: A new ambiguity preference survey module Journal of Risk and Uncertainty 58 71-100
  • [4] Alesina A(2000)On the propensity to self-protect Journal of Risk and Insurance 67 555-577
  • [5] Stantcheva S(2015)Estimating ambiguity preferences and perceptions in multiple prior models: Evidence from the field Journal of Risk and Uncertainty 51 219-244
  • [6] Teso E(2005)The impact of prudence on optimal prevention Economic Theory 26 989-994
  • [7] Cavatorta E(2018)Communication of scientific uncertainty about a novel pandemic health threat: Ambiguity aversion and its mechanisms Journal of Health Communication 23 435-444
  • [8] Schröder D(2002)Risk Aversion and Incentive Effects American Economic Review 92 1644-1655
  • [9] Chiu WH(1951)Some specification problems and applications to econometric models Econometrica 19 343-344
  • [10] Dimmock SG(2020)COVID-19 enhanced diminishing sensitivity in prospect-theory risk preferences: A panel analysis Institute of Social and Economic Research Discussion Papers 1106 1-25