The book addresses the conflict between long-term goals and short-term gratification, often referred to as "present bias," where people overvalue immediate rewards.
Just examines behavioral anomalies under risk, such as loss aversion —the tendency to prefer avoiding losses over acquiring equivalent gains—and how individuals process limited or complex information.
Treating money differently based on its source or intended use (e.g., spending a tax refund more freely than a monthly paycheck).
David R. Just’s is a comprehensive textbook that bridges the gap between traditional economic theory and the complex realities of human psychology. Published by Wiley, this work serves as a formal training guide for students to understand non-rational behaviors in economic agents and apply these insights to real-world decision-making. Core Themes and Structural Framework
This section analyzes how transaction utility, mental accounting, and price anchors influence what people buy and how much they are willing to pay.
The opening chapters explore why people often deviate from optimal choices, distinguishing between pure irrationality and the "rationalization" of biased decisions.
The tendency to stick with a default option, such as an existing health insurance plan, even when better alternatives are available. Practical Applications and Pedagogy
The book addresses the conflict between long-term goals and short-term gratification, often referred to as "present bias," where people overvalue immediate rewards.
Just examines behavioral anomalies under risk, such as loss aversion —the tendency to prefer avoiding losses over acquiring equivalent gains—and how individuals process limited or complex information.
Treating money differently based on its source or intended use (e.g., spending a tax refund more freely than a monthly paycheck).
David R. Just’s is a comprehensive textbook that bridges the gap between traditional economic theory and the complex realities of human psychology. Published by Wiley, this work serves as a formal training guide for students to understand non-rational behaviors in economic agents and apply these insights to real-world decision-making. Core Themes and Structural Framework
This section analyzes how transaction utility, mental accounting, and price anchors influence what people buy and how much they are willing to pay.
The opening chapters explore why people often deviate from optimal choices, distinguishing between pure irrationality and the "rationalization" of biased decisions.
The tendency to stick with a default option, such as an existing health insurance plan, even when better alternatives are available. Practical Applications and Pedagogy