© 2024 New Hampshire Public Radio

Persons with disabilities who need assistance accessing NHPR's FCC public files, please contact us at publicfile@nhpr.org.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
🚗 🚗 🚗 Donate your old vehicle to NHPR and support local, independent journalism. It's easy and free!

Dissecting People's 'Predictably Irrational' Behavior

As a behavioral economist, Dan Ariely studies the way people make economic decisions.

His conclusion? We don't do it the way economists typically say we do.

Instead, he finds, humans are "predictably irrational," which is also the title of his latest book.

Predictably Irrational explains how the reasoning behind those decisions is often flawed because of the invisible forces at work in people's brains: emotions, expectations and social norms.

"Our willingness to pay, it turns out, is not just a function of the utility of the pleasure that we expect to get from [the item], it's also influenced by all kinds of irrelevant factors that change our psychology but not our economic reasoning," Ariely says.

Ariely is on the faculty of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; he's currently on leave and teaching at Duke University.

He talks to Robert Siegel about his experiments, which involve activities such as mock auctions, trick-or-treating and selling chocolate to college students. He also explains how he discovered that the "allure of free" tempts people to give up something better and why behavioral economics is important for policymaking.

Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

You make NHPR possible.

NHPR is nonprofit and independent. We rely on readers like you to support the local, national, and international coverage on this website. Your support makes this news available to everyone.

Give today. A monthly donation of $5 makes a real difference.