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"We have an irrational tendency to be less willing to gamble with profits than with losses.."

––Tvede (1999)

In these lectures, we'll build on the insights of the Efficient and Adaptive Markets hypotheses, and have a go at puling them down at the same time. This might sound contradictory, but it's not. All science (even a pseudo-science like modern economics) advances through sustained and successful criticism. It's ok to tear down the existing theory, but if you do, try to make sure there's something to replace it with.

Stated baldly, Behavioural Finance is the study of the inefficiency of real world markets. Most of the time, behavioural finance theorists will borrow concepts from psychology or sociology to make their claims more realistic. The behavioural economics movement is closely aligned with the Neuroeconomics movement currently en vogue in academic economic circles. Dr. Liam Delaney of UCD's Geary institute retains a bibliography of neuroeconomics readings, if you're interested.

To the theory-proper. In previous lectures, we worked on the Efficient Markets Hypothesis: markets price traded assets to remove the possibility of arbitrage, making risk-less profits harder and harder to come by.

Nobellist Daniel Kahneman and his colleague Amos Tversky studied decision making under uncertainty over a long period of time (their most famous article is here). They found three heuristics people use to help them make judgements under uncertainty:

1. Representativeness. When possibly erroneous commonality between objects of similar appearance is assumed.

2. Availability. We base our predictions of the frequency of events or the proportion within a population based on how easily an example can be brought to mind.

3. Anchoring and Adjustment. We overly rely, on specific information or a specific value and then adjust to that value to account for other elements of the circumstance. Usually once the anchor is set, there is a bias toward that value.

In this lecture, we'll look at Prospect theory and asset pricing, and compare Kahneman's and Tversky's theory to the data. We'll also see how various famous behavioural economists (Profs. Shiller, Thaler, and Camerer).

In lecture 19, we'll move on to consider Thaler's 'Anomalies': holes he and co-authors have found in the existing body of theory, as they apply to Financial Economics. Here is a 3 slide per page handout.

Slides

Links

Thaler's Anomalies page, get the papers here.

Camerer, C. and G. Loewenstein (2003). “Behavioral Economics: Past, Present, Future,”

Sewell, M. (2008) "Introduction to Behavioural Finance" ⁃
Shiller, R. (2002), "From Efficient Markets to Behavioural Finance."

  Posts

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December 10th, 2019

Using Social Media to Boost your profile

My talk for the social media summit is here. 

November 5th, 2019

Innospace UL talk

Thanks for the invitation to speak, the whole talk is here. 

October 9th, 2019

Understanding the macroeconomy podcast

I really enjoyed my interview with Dr Niall Farrell of the Irish Economics Podcast. You can listen to it here:

September 15th, 2018

Identifying Mechanisms Underlying Peer Effects on Multiplex Networks

New paper with Hang Xiong and Diane Payne just published in JASS: Abstract: We separately identify two mechanisms underlying peer […]

March 24th, 2018

Capital inflows, crisis and recovery in small open economies

Our latest paper, and my first with my Melbourne School of Government affiliation (plus my UL one, of course) is […]

March 7th, 2018

Southern Charm

What's it like working at Australia's number one university, ranked 23rd in the world for social sciences? It's pretty cool, […]

February 7th, 2018

Freedom interview

I did an interview for an app I love using called Freedom. Basically I pay them to block off the […]

December 10th, 2017

Marian Finucane Interview

I did a fairly long interview about the experience of moving to Australia with my family. You can listen here.

November 17th, 2017

Increasing wages for macroeconomic stability

My first piece for the conversation is here. I'm arguing the economy would benefit from wage increases, paid for from […]

November 14th, 2017

Health Workforce Planning Models, Tools and Processes: An Evidence Review

Below is my recorded talk, here are my slides, and the handout for the 4th Global Forum on Human Resources for […]

October 5th, 2017

Aalborg Keynote

My talk from the fourth Nordic Post Keynesian conference is up. The full list of keynotes is here.

October 1st, 2017

AIST Debt and Demography talk

(Apparently Limerick is in the UK now!)

September 7th, 2017

My AIST Keynote: Europe Exposed

In which a camera man faints halfway through--he's OK though, I checked afterwards!

July 22nd, 2017

MacGill Summer School Speech

My speech at the MacGill Summer School is here. Thanks to Joe Muholland for inviting me to speak.

May 25th, 2017

Business Post Articles

All my Sunday Business Post articles (back to 2014/5, when I joined the paper) are available here, behind a paywall, and […]

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