Risk aversion, path dependency and financial economic decision-making in low-income communities: Experimental evidence from South Africa

Orientation: Poverty is deeply entrenched in South Africa, and various initiatives to reduce it have not been successful. Behavioural economics may help explain this by testing whether individuals exhibit path dependence when making decisions under uncertainty. Research purpose: The aim of this art...

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Main Authors: Syden Mishi, Robert Mwanyapedza, Florence Katsande, Zintle Sikhunyana
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Economic and Financial Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jefjournal.org.za/index.php/jef/article/view/562
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spelling doaj-0a20c8d8e24641e9a558359773c9c4702021-04-02T16:07:49ZengAOSISJournal of Economic and Financial Sciences1995-70762312-28032020-12-01131e1e1410.4102/jef.v13i1.562418Risk aversion, path dependency and financial economic decision-making in low-income communities: Experimental evidence from South AfricaSyden Mishi0Robert Mwanyapedza1Florence Katsande2Zintle Sikhunyana3Department of Economics, Faculty of Business and Economic Sciences, Nelson Mandela University, Port ElizabethDepartment of Economics, Faculty of Business and Economic Sciences, Nelson Mandela University, Port ElizabethDepartment of Economics, Faculty of Business and Economic Sciences, Nelson Mandela University, Port ElizabethDepartment of Economics, Faculty of Business and Economic Sciences, Nelson Mandela University, Port ElizabethOrientation: Poverty is deeply entrenched in South Africa, and various initiatives to reduce it have not been successful. Behavioural economics may help explain this by testing whether individuals exhibit path dependence when making decisions under uncertainty. Research purpose: The aim of this article was to test the presence of path dependence and the determinants of risk aversion. Motivation for the study: This study was conducted in Eastern Cape province of South Africa, which is largely rural, with a high level of poverty, where 36% of households depend on social security grants, and unemployment is higher than the national average. Research approach/design and method: An experimental design approach was applied, eliciting risk under different prospects. Descriptive statistics was used to determine path dependency, with random effects regression used to investigate the determinants of risk aversion. Main findings: The results show the existence of path dependence, with individuals who are more risk averse unwilling to change their choices even if they stand to win or lose more than in the previous period. Practical/managerial implications: Policymakers need to consider these behavioural characteristics in formulating policies to reduce poverty. Information and how that information is presented (framing) are central for impactful policy formulation. Contribution/value-add: The results here have policy implications on addressing triple challenges bedeviling South Africa and many developing countries.https://jefjournal.org.za/index.php/jef/article/view/562decision-makingexperimental economicsinequality of opportunitieslivelihoodspovertyuncertainty
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Syden Mishi
Robert Mwanyapedza
Florence Katsande
Zintle Sikhunyana
spellingShingle Syden Mishi
Robert Mwanyapedza
Florence Katsande
Zintle Sikhunyana
Risk aversion, path dependency and financial economic decision-making in low-income communities: Experimental evidence from South Africa
Journal of Economic and Financial Sciences
decision-making
experimental economics
inequality of opportunities
livelihoods
poverty
uncertainty
author_facet Syden Mishi
Robert Mwanyapedza
Florence Katsande
Zintle Sikhunyana
author_sort Syden Mishi
title Risk aversion, path dependency and financial economic decision-making in low-income communities: Experimental evidence from South Africa
title_short Risk aversion, path dependency and financial economic decision-making in low-income communities: Experimental evidence from South Africa
title_full Risk aversion, path dependency and financial economic decision-making in low-income communities: Experimental evidence from South Africa
title_fullStr Risk aversion, path dependency and financial economic decision-making in low-income communities: Experimental evidence from South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Risk aversion, path dependency and financial economic decision-making in low-income communities: Experimental evidence from South Africa
title_sort risk aversion, path dependency and financial economic decision-making in low-income communities: experimental evidence from south africa
publisher AOSIS
series Journal of Economic and Financial Sciences
issn 1995-7076
2312-2803
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Orientation: Poverty is deeply entrenched in South Africa, and various initiatives to reduce it have not been successful. Behavioural economics may help explain this by testing whether individuals exhibit path dependence when making decisions under uncertainty. Research purpose: The aim of this article was to test the presence of path dependence and the determinants of risk aversion. Motivation for the study: This study was conducted in Eastern Cape province of South Africa, which is largely rural, with a high level of poverty, where 36% of households depend on social security grants, and unemployment is higher than the national average. Research approach/design and method: An experimental design approach was applied, eliciting risk under different prospects. Descriptive statistics was used to determine path dependency, with random effects regression used to investigate the determinants of risk aversion. Main findings: The results show the existence of path dependence, with individuals who are more risk averse unwilling to change their choices even if they stand to win or lose more than in the previous period. Practical/managerial implications: Policymakers need to consider these behavioural characteristics in formulating policies to reduce poverty. Information and how that information is presented (framing) are central for impactful policy formulation. Contribution/value-add: The results here have policy implications on addressing triple challenges bedeviling South Africa and many developing countries.
topic decision-making
experimental economics
inequality of opportunities
livelihoods
poverty
uncertainty
url https://jefjournal.org.za/index.php/jef/article/view/562
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AT florencekatsande riskaversionpathdependencyandfinancialeconomicdecisionmakinginlowincomecommunitiesexperimentalevidencefromsouthafrica
AT zintlesikhunyana riskaversionpathdependencyandfinancialeconomicdecisionmakinginlowincomecommunitiesexperimentalevidencefromsouthafrica
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