Sunk cost fallacy in driving the world’s costliest cars
We develop a behavioral model of durable good usage with mental accounting for sunk costs. It predicts higher-than-rational usage that attenuates at a rate that increases with sunk costs. Singapore government policy varied the sunk cost of buying a new car. Using Singapore data, we estimate the elas...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1058252023-05-19T06:44:41Z Sunk cost fallacy in driving the world’s costliest cars Ho, Teck-Hua Png, I. P. L. Reza, Sadat Nanyang Business School Mental Accounting Sunk Costs DRNTU::Business::Accounting::Cost We develop a behavioral model of durable good usage with mental accounting for sunk costs. It predicts higher-than-rational usage that attenuates at a rate that increases with sunk costs. Singapore government policy varied the sunk cost of buying a new car. Using Singapore data, we estimate the elasticity of driving with respect to sunk costs to be 0.048, which implies that government policy between 2009 and 2013 was associated with 86 kilometers per month, or 5.6%, more driving. The results are robust to specifying sunk costs as relative to buyer income and estimation with Hong Kong data. We believe this to be the first field evidence of the sunk cost fallacy in usage of a major durable good. Accepted version 2019-06-14T02:31:26Z 2019-12-06T21:58:43Z 2019-06-14T02:31:26Z 2019-12-06T21:58:43Z 2018 Journal Article Ho, T. H., Png, I. P. L., & Reza, S. (2018). Sunk Cost Fallacy in Driving the World’s Costliest Cars. Management Science, 64(4), 1761-1778. doi:10.1287/mnsc.2016.2651 0025-1909 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/105825 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/48747 10.1287/mnsc.2016.2651 en Management Science © 2017 INFORMS. All rights reserved. This paper was published in Management Science and is made available with permission of INFORMS. 36 p. application/pdf |
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Mental Accounting Sunk Costs DRNTU::Business::Accounting::Cost Ho, Teck-Hua Png, I. P. L. Reza, Sadat Sunk cost fallacy in driving the world’s costliest cars |
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We develop a behavioral model of durable good usage with mental accounting for sunk costs. It predicts higher-than-rational usage that attenuates at a rate that increases with sunk costs. Singapore government policy varied the sunk cost of buying a new car. Using Singapore data, we estimate the elasticity of driving with respect to sunk costs to be 0.048, which implies that government policy between 2009 and 2013 was associated with 86 kilometers per month, or 5.6%, more driving. The results are robust to specifying sunk costs as relative to buyer income and estimation with Hong Kong data. We believe this to be the first field evidence of the sunk cost fallacy in usage of a major durable good. |
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Nanyang Business School |
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Nanyang Business School Ho, Teck-Hua Png, I. P. L. Reza, Sadat |
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Article |
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Ho, Teck-Hua Png, I. P. L. Reza, Sadat |
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Ho, Teck-Hua |
title |
Sunk cost fallacy in driving the world’s costliest cars |
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Sunk cost fallacy in driving the world’s costliest cars |
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Sunk cost fallacy in driving the world’s costliest cars |
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Sunk cost fallacy in driving the world’s costliest cars |
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Sunk cost fallacy in driving the world’s costliest cars |
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sunk cost fallacy in driving the world’s costliest cars |
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2019 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/105825 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/48747 |
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1770565427094618112 |