Brújula Home

Institutional repository of the Universidad Loyola

View Item 
  •   Brújula Home
  • PRODUCCIÓN CIENTÍFICA Y TRANSFERENCIA
  • Departamento Economía
  • Artículos
  • View Item
  •   Brújula Home
  • PRODUCCIÓN CIENTÍFICA Y TRANSFERENCIA
  • Departamento Economía
  • Artículos
  • View Item
    • español
    • English
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Browse

All of BrújulaCommunities and CollectionsAuthorsTitlesKeywordsAuthor profilesThis CollectionAuthorsTitlesKeywords

My Account

Login

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

Añadido Recientemente

Novedades
Repository
How to publish
Visibility
FAQs

Visual continuous time preferences: field experiment in Honduras

Author:
Prissé, Benjamin; Jorrat, Diego
URI:
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12412/5485
Date:
2024-03-15
Keyword(s):

Time Preference; MPL; CTB; Visual Experiment; Field Experiment.

Abstract:

Visual Continuous Time Preferences (VCTP) is a new tool for measuring time preferences that synthesizes the simplicity of Multiple Price List (MPL) and the precision of Convex Time Budget (CTB) tasks. We evaluate this tool in the field, in rural Honduras, to test whether running the task with enumerators and reducing the number of balls to five improves the quality of results. We partially replicate results of the laboratory experiment since subjects answer the task rapidly and consistently to reveal their time preferences, but they make little use of the additional precision. Enumerators are crucial for maintaining sample size and reducing the number of balls is not an improvement because it decreases the precision of answers. Results therefore suggest the power of the visual methodology to measure economic preferences with populations struggling with complexity by making accessible the salient aspects of the reasoning.

Visual Continuous Time Preferences (VCTP) is a new tool for measuring time preferences that synthesizes the simplicity of Multiple Price List (MPL) and the precision of Convex Time Budget (CTB) tasks. We evaluate this tool in the field, in rural Honduras, to test whether running the task with enumerators and reducing the number of balls to five improves the quality of results. We partially replicate results of the laboratory experiment since subjects answer the task rapidly and consistently to reveal their time preferences, but they make little use of the additional precision. Enumerators are crucial for maintaining sample size and reducing the number of balls is not an improvement because it decreases the precision of answers. Results therefore suggest the power of the visual methodology to measure economic preferences with populations struggling with complexity by making accessible the salient aspects of the reasoning.

Show full item record
Collections
  • Artículos
Files in this item
Thumbnail
Artículo principal (715.9Kb)
Share
Export to Mendeley
Statistics
Usage statistics
Metrics and citations
Go to Brújula home

Universidad Loyola

Library

Contact

Facebook Loyola BibliotecaTwitter Loyola Biblioteca

The content of the Repository is protected with a Creative Commons license:

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional

Creative Commons Image