Natural Order - The Endowment Effect
It’s mine, I tell you
Mankind’s inner chimpanzee refuses to let go. This matters to
everything from economics to law.
“I AM the most offensively possessive man on earth. I do something to
things. Let me pick up an ashtray from a dime-store counter, pay for it
and put it in my pocket—and it becomes a special kind of ashtray,
unlike any on earth, because it’s mine.” What was true of Wynand, one
of the main characters in Ayn Rand’s novel “The Fountainhead”, may be
true of everyone. From basketball tickets to waterfowl-hunting rights
to classic albums, once someone owns something, he places a higher
value on it than he did when he acquired it—an observation first called
“the endowment effect” about 28 years ago by Richard Thaler, who these
days works at the University of Chicago.
The
endowment effect was controversial for years. The idea that a squishy,
irrational bit of human behaviour could affect the cold, clean and
rational world of markets was a challenge to neoclassical economists.
Their assumption had always been that individuals act to maximise their
welfare (the defining characteristic of economic man, or Homo
economicus). The value someone puts on something should not, therefore,
depend on whether he actually owns it. But the endowment effect has
been seen in hundreds of experiments, the most famous of which found
that students were surprisingly reluctant to trade a coffee mug they
had been given for a bar of chocolate, even though they did not prefer
coffee mugs to chocolate when given a straight choice between the two.
Moreover, it is now possible to see the effect in the brain. In the
June 12th edition of Neuron, Brian Knutson of Stanford University
describes a brain-scanning study he carried out recently. The pattern
and location of the activity he observed suggests the endowment effect
works by enhancing the salience of possible loss. But that still does
not explain why this sense of loss should be felt. The question is
whether such behaviour is truly irrational, or just “differently”
rational. That might be the case if, for instance, it was a hangover
from the evolutionary past that worked then, but is no longer
appropriate now.
Mug’s game
The endowment effect has nothing to do with wealth (it is not as if
chocolate bars and coffee mugs matter) or transaction costs (in most
experiments these are zero). Not even emotional attachment, whatever
that means, can really be called in as an explanation, since the effect
is both instantaneous and sometimes felt even by those who buy and sell
for a living. According to Pete Lunn, an economist at the Economic and
Social Research Institute in Dublin, professional market traders are
often reluctant to sell investments they already hold, even though they
could trade them for assets they would prefer to invest in if starting
from scratch.
Supposedly rational economists are affected, too. Dr Thaler, who
recently had some expensive bottles of wine stolen, observes that he is
“now confronted with precisely one of my own experiments: these are
bottles I wasn’t planning to sell and now I’m going to get a cheque
from an insurance company and most of these bottles I will not buy. I’m
a good enough economist to know there’s a bit of an inconsistency
there.”
The effect is not, however, universally observed. Whereas coffee mugs
generate an endowment effect, tokens that can be exchanged for coffee
mugs do not. And despite Dr Lunn’s observations, other work suggests
professional traders can, and do, overcome the effect. So what is going
on?
Owen Jones, a professor of law and biology at Vanderbilt University,
and Sarah Brosnan, a primatologist at Georgia State University, suspect
the answer is that, in the evolutionary past, giving things up, even
when an apparently fair exchange seemed to be on offer, was just too
risky. These days, as they discuss in a paper just published in the
William and Mary Law Review, there are contracts, rights and other ways
of enforcing bargains. Animal societies have none of these mechanisms.
As Adam Smith observed in the Wealth of Nations, "nobody ever
saw a dog make a fair and deliberate exchange of one bone for another
with another dog.”
To put flesh on their idea, Dr Jones and Dr Brosnan have been trying to
overcome Smith’s observation by training chimpanzees to trade. In 2006
Keith Chen of Yale University showed that capuchin monkeys could learn
to do so, and also seemed to exhibit the endowment effect. Chimps, it
turns out, can manage to truck too. In the chimp study, tubes of peanut
butter and frozen juice bars were used. Both treats were designed to be
difficult to eat quickly. This makes it possible for animals that would
otherwise consume any food they were given at the first opportunity at
least to consider the idea of an exchange.
When presented with a choice, 60% of the chimps preferred peanut butter
to juice. However, when they were endowed with peanut butter, 80% of
them chose to keep it instead of exchanging it for juice. It was as if
the peanut butter became more valuable as soon as it was possessed. And
an opposite endowment effect was observed when the chimps were given
juice.
Observing the endowment effect in three primate species suggests it
does, indeed, have deep evolutionary roots. Better still, before they
started work Dr Jones and Dr Brosnan predicted that the strength of the
effect would vary with the evolutionary salience of the item in
question. Lo and behold, when they tried the same experiments using
bone and rope toys, no endowment effect was seen. Food is vital. Toys
are not.
If the endowment effect does indeed vary according to evolutionary
salience, this may make sense of the disparate results of hundreds of
studies on people. But it does raise the question of what is and is not
evolutionarily salient. Food and mates clearly are. Tangible goods such
as mugs, as opposed to abstract goods such as vouchers for mugs,
probably are too. But intangible possessions, such as shareholdings, do
generate some effect, so physical presence cannot be all there is to it.
Steffen Huck, an economist at University College, London, has an
alternative hypothesis that is directly to do with trade. In societies
with markets, customers can go elsewhere. But in a small, tribal
society there may be no alternative seller. In that case, those who
were reluctant to trade might get better prices. It may thus make sense
for an owner to be psychologically predisposed to hold out for a high
price as soon as someone else expresses interest in one of his
possessions—something Dr Huck’s models predict would, indeed, be
evolutionarily beneficial.
Keep on trucking
Because the endowment effect touches on so many areas, Dr Jones thinks
it may be helpful for legislators to understand its evolutionary
origins. That goods and rights such as pollution permits, radio
spectrum and mobile-telephone licences do not inexorably flow towards
the most efficient distribution worries the legal scholars charged with
designing fair allocations. The effect also complicates the negotiation
of contracts, as people demand more to give up standard provisions than
they would have been willing to pay had they bargained anew.
Nor is the endowment effect alone in suggesting that Homo economicus is
a rarer species than neoclassical taxonomists would like to believe.
Other “irrational” phenomena include confirmation bias (searching for
or interpreting information in a way that confirms one’s
preconceptions), the bandwagon effect (doing things because others do
them) and framing problems (when the conclusion reached depends on the
way the data are presented). All in all, the rational conclusion is
that humans are irrational animals.
Neural
Antecedents of the Endowment Effectck
| Home
| Charity |