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Behavioural Economics

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This book introduces behavioral economics, explaining its approach and methodology and assessing its successes and weaknesses. Graham Mallard explores how it has advanced our understanding of human...
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  • 30 July 2017
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The rise of behavioural approaches in economics has been one of most significant developments in the study of economic decision-making in recent years. The increasingly acknowledged failings of standard models of choice to explain economic decisions has prompted economists to incorporate into their analysis psychological insights into individual behaviour, such as social cognitive and emotional biases. This book introduces the topic of behavioural economics to a beginning readership, explaining its approach and methodology and assessing its successes and weaknesses.

The book begins by tracing the evolution of the field from its origins in Adam Smith’s moral sentiments through the work of Herbert Simon to Daniel Kahneman and Richard Thaler today. The book explores how behavioural economics has advanced our understanding of human preferences including notions of fairness, reciprocity and inequality aversion, and the mental processes involved in decision making, which vary with the complexity of the decision and the ability of the decision-maker to process the information. The decision-making of individuals within social and economic groups is explored, including financial practitioners and what this can mean for financial markets. Finally the book looks at the ways in which findings from behavioural economics have been used to alter the decisions people make, such as the nudge approach, and the ethics of such persuasion.

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Price: $29.95
Pages: 136
Publisher: Agenda Publishing
Imprint: Agenda Publishing
Publication Date: 30 July 2017
Trim Size: 8.25 X 5.85 in
ISBN: 9781911116417
Format: Paperback
BISACs: BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Economics / Theory
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A clearly written, interesting and up-to-date overview that makes behavioural economics accessible to a readership unfamiliar with the subject, or with economics more broadly.
— Michalis Drouvelis, University of Birmingham
Graham Mallard is Head of Economics at Clifton College. He gained his PhD in economics from the University of Bath in 2011, where he remains a Visiting Research Fellow. He is the author of two successful textbooks: The Economics Companion (2011) and Transport Economics (co-authored with Stephen Glaister) (2008).

1. Empiricism Returns

2. Evolution and Revolution

3. Preferences

4. Processes

5. Participation

6. Persuasion

7. Reflections