Abstract
We analyze the relation between individuals’ risk aversion and their willingness to expose themselves to infection when faced with an asymptomatic infectious disease. We show that in a high prevalence environment, increasing individuals’ risk aversion increases their propensity to engage in transmissive behavior. The reason for this result is that as risk aversion increases, exposure which leads to infection with certainty becomes relatively more attractive than the uncertain payoffs from protected behavior. We provide evidence from a laboratory experiment which is consistent with our theoretical findings.
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We thank Julien Gagnon, Edoardo Gallo, Sönje Reiche, Daniel Sgroi and Jakob Berndt for useful comments on this paper. We also thank the editor Nicholas Yannelis and three anonymous referees for very useful suggestions.
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Matthies, K., Toxvaerd, F. Rather doomed than uncertain: risk attitudes and transmissive behavior under asymptomatic infection. Econ Theory 76, 1–44 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00199-022-01448-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00199-022-01448-y