
Traditionally economics is based on very narrow presumptions about human behavior, namely selfishness. In the last 20 years, however, experimental research has accumulated overwhelming evidence that is at odds with these classical assumptions. It has been shown that people very often care about the distributional consequences of their actions and intentions. Against this background, in this thesis the impact of broader models of human behavior on decision making and human interactions is studied, for example the impact of indirect reciprocity on human relationships. If educational expenditures of parents into children depend on grandparents' investments into the parent’s education, then private educational spending is inefficiently low and should be supported by the state. This finding stands in contrast to earlier results that show that parents might invest optimally into the education of their children out of pure altruism or strategic transfer motives.
Doctorat en Sciences politiques et sociales
info:eu-repo/semantics/published
Economics -- Psychological aspects, Behavioral Economics, Sciences sociales, Economie politique -- Aspect psychologique, Consommateurs -- Comportement, Economie, Consumer behavior
Economics -- Psychological aspects, Behavioral Economics, Sciences sociales, Economie politique -- Aspect psychologique, Consommateurs -- Comportement, Economie, Consumer behavior
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