Ted O’Donoghue1,2, Matthew Rabin3
1CORNELL U
2Department of Economics, 414 Uris Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853.
3Department of Economics, 549 Evans Hall #3880, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720.
Tóm tắt
We examine self-control problems—modeled as time-inconsistent, present-biased preferences—in a model where a person must do an activity exactly once. We emphasize two distinctions: Do activities involve immediate costs or immediate rewards, and are people sophisticated or naive about future self-control problems? Naive people procrastinate immediate-cost activities and preproperate—do too soon—immediate-reward activities. Sophistication mitigates procrastination, but exacerbates preproperation. Moreover, with immediate costs, a small present bias can severely harm only naive people, whereas with immediate rewards it can severely harm only sophisticated people. Lessons for savings, addiction, and elsewhere are discussed. (JEL A12, B49, C70, D11, D60, D74, D91, E21)