‘My book of the year … the father of behavioural
economics makes a pugnacious case that humans do not behave as the economics
textbooks say’ Tim Harford, FT
Nobel Prize-winner and co-author of Nudge, Richard Thaler, and star
economist Alex Imas explore behavioral economics in this fully updated edition
of the seminal work The Winner’s Curse
Why do people cooperate with one another when they have no incentive to do so?
Why do we hold onto possessions of little value? And why is the winner of an
auction so often disappointed?
Over thirty years ago, Richard Thaler introduced readers to behavioral
economics in his seminal Anomalies column, written with
collaborators including Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky. These provocative
articles challenged the fundamental idea at the heart of economics that people
are selfish, rational optimizers, and provided the foundation for what became behavioral
economics. That was then. Now, three decades later, Thaler has
teamed up with economist Alex Imas to write a new book. Every chapter starts
with an original Anomaly, retaining the spirit of its timestamp.
Then, shifting to the present, they provide current updates to each, asking how
the original findings have held up and how the field has evolved since then.
It turns out these findings still show up almost everywhere. Anomalies pop up
in people’s decisions to save for retirement and how they carry outstanding
credit card debt. Even experts fail to optimize. The key concept of loss
aversion explains missed putts by golf pros and the selection of which stocks
to sell by portfolio managers. In this era of meme stocks and Dogecoin, it is
hard to defend the view that financial markets are highly efficient. The good
news, however, is that the anomalies have got much funnier.
With both readability and rigor, The Winner’s Curse illuminates
these ideas for anyone – from those with a cursory understanding of economics
to fellow economists. Each chapter provides a key insight into human behavior
so readers learn how to better understand the choices made by their friends,
colleagues, and customers, and might just become better at making decisions
themselves.
About the Author
Richard H. Thaler (Author)
Richard H. Thaler received the 2017 Nobel Prize in Economic
Sciences. He is a distinguished service professor of economics and behavioral
science at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business. He is
the New York Times bestselling coauthor of Nudge:
Improving Decisions about Health, Wealth, and Happiness (with Cass
Sunstein) and the author of Misbehaving: The Making of Behavioral
Economics.
Alex O. Imas (Author)
Alex O. Imas is Professor of Behavioral Science and Economics at
the University of Chicago School’s Booth School of Business. He is the
recipient of the 2023 Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship, the Review of
Financial Studies Rising Scholar Award, the New Investigator Award from the
Behavioral Science and Policy Association, the Hillel Einhorn New Investigator
Award from the Society of Judgment and Decision Making, the Distinguished
CESifo Affiliate Award, and the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship. Previously,
he was Assistant Professor of Behavioral Economics at Carnegie Mellon
University.