In this study, we investigated whether the risk preference systematically changed during the spread of COVID-19 in Japan. Traditionally, risk preference is assumed to be stable over one’s life, though it differs among individuals. While recent studies have reported that it changes with a large event like natural disasters and financial crisis, they have not reached a consensus on its direction, risk aversion, or tolerance. We collected panel data of Japanese individuals in five waves from March to June 2020, which covered the period of the first cycle when COVID-19 spread rapidly and then dwindled. We measured risk preference through questions on the willingness to pay for insurance. The main results are as follows: First, people became more risk tolerant throughout the period; and second, people were more averse to mega risk than moderate risk, with the former correlating more strongly with the individual’s perception of COVID-19. The first result may be interpreted as “habituation” to repeated stress, as is understood in neuroscience.
机构:
Chinese Acad Social Sci, Inst Quantitat & Tech Econ, Beijing, Peoples R ChinaChinese Acad Social Sci, Inst Quantitat & Tech Econ, Beijing, Peoples R China
Zhuang, Qinqin
Luo, Weijie
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Beijing Int Studies Univ, Sch Econ, Beijing 100024, Peoples R ChinaChinese Acad Social Sci, Inst Quantitat & Tech Econ, Beijing, Peoples R China
Luo, Weijie
Li, Yupeng
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Cent Univ Finance & Econ, Sch Int Trade & Econ, Beijing, Peoples R China
Cornell Univ, Charles H Dyson Sch Appl Econ & Management, Ithaca, NY USAChinese Acad Social Sci, Inst Quantitat & Tech Econ, Beijing, Peoples R China