The theory of endogenous risk captures the idea that people self-protect and self-insure to reduce risks to human and environmental health. Herein we extend the standard static model to include the realities of (1) dynamic and multiple risks, and (2) non-expected utility (non-EU) behavior. Ourresults suggest both self-protection and self-insurance decrease for any one risk when cumulative dynamic risks are large and when multiple risks exist. If people are non-EU maximizers, self-protection and self-insurance also decline when they follow the conservatism heuristic (insufficient weighting ofnew information). In addition, if non-EU people over- and under-weight probabilities of bad states, they can invest non-linearly in self-protection and self-insurance.
Publication
The Korean Economic Review
Dynamic Endogenous Risks & Non-Expected Utility Behavior
Ram Ranjan (Macquarie University) and Jason F. Shogren (University of Wyoming)Year 2009Vol. 25No. 2
Abstract