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Journal Article

Windfall Gains and House Money: The Effects of Endowment History and Prior Outcomes on Risky Decision-making

Authors

  • Jelschen
  • H.
  • Schmidt
  • U.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1007/s11166-023-09411-5

JEL Classification

C91 D81

Key Words

House money effect

Windfall gains

Risk aversion

Quasi-hedonic editing

Prospect theory

In a seminal contribution, Thaler and Johnson (1990) detected the existence of a house money effect which is defined as an increase in risk tolerance after previous gains resulting from a risky activity. Subsequent studies used the term house money effect also in case of windfall gains, i.e., easily acquired money like show-up fees or initial endowments in experiments which does not result from a risky investment. The present study is to the best of our knowledge the first that disentangles the house money effect and windfall gains. We find a clear and systematic pattern that windfall gains increase risk tolerance. In contrast, the house money effect is far less ubiquitous and seems to require skewed lotteries and/or a large number of rounds played. We, therefore, conclude that a careful distinction between windfall gains and the house money effect is warranted in future research.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Dr. Dr. Ulrich Schmidt
    Research Director

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