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Collective risk-taking by couples: Individual vs household risk
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Collective risk-taking by couples: Individual vs household risk

Jiakun Zheng, Hélène Couprie and Astrid Hopfensitz
Theory and Decision, Vol.98(4), pp.599-628
01/06/2025

Abstract

experiment household risk taking inequality
101 real couples participated in a controlled experimental risk-taking task involving variations in household and individual income risks, while controlling for ex-ante income inequality. Our design disentangles the effects of household risk, intra-household risk inequality, and ex-post payoff inequality. We find that most couples (about 79%) pooled their risk at the household level when risks were borne symmetrically, but a significant proportion of couples (about 36%) failed to do so when individual risks were borne asymmetrically. Additionally, within the scope of the control variables we have utilized, we find that intra-household risk inequality has a larger impact on non-married couples compared to married ones. These results remain robust when the analysis is limited to couples in which both spouses are risk-averse. Lastly, we find that preferences for household efficiency are significantly correlated across both certain and risky situations. However, couples consisting of two income-maximizing spouses do not show greater aversion to risk inequality compared to couples with other compositions.
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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.122 Economic Theory
6.122.1287 Risk Preferences
Web of Science research areas
Economics
Social Sciences, Mathematical Methods
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