Artigo Revisado por pares

Payment Depreciation: the Behavioral Effects of Temporally Separating Payments From Consumption

1998; Oxford University Press; Volume: 25; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1086/209533

ISSN

1537-5277

Autores

John T. Gourville, Dilip Soman,

Tópico(s)

Decision-Making and Behavioral Economics

Resumo

Research suggests that individuals mentally track the costs and benefits of a consumer transaction for the purpose of reconciling those costs and benefits on completion of the transaction (Prelec and Loewenstein 1998; Thaler 1980, 1985). In transactions where costs precede benefits, this can lead to a systematic and economically irrational attention to sunk costs (Arkes and Blumer 1985; Thaler 1980). In this article, we consider economic exchanges in which costs significantly precede benefits, as with many prepayment types of consumer transactions. We predict a consumer will gradually adapt to a historic cost with the passage of time, thereby decreasing its sunk-cost impact on the consumption of a pending benefit. We label this process of gradual adaptation to costs “payment depreciation.” In a series of experiments, we find evidence of payment depreciation across a range of consumer transactions and offer insight into the behavioral implications of temporally separating costs from benefits.

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