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Nobel-winning psychologist Daniel Kahneman explains his problem with people using the term ‘behavioral economics.’
If you’re looking to better understand your own brain and only have time
to read one book on the subject, it should be Daniel Kahneman’s Thinking, Fast and Slow,
now out in paperback. Kahneman, a psychologist at Princeton University
who won the 2002 Nobel Prize for economics for work that he and longtime
collaborator Amos Tversky did on the psychology of decision making,
gives a detailed, comprehensive account of how our cognitive processes
are divided into fast (“System 1”) and slow (“System 2”) thinking.
System 1 handles basic tasks and calculations like walking, breathing,
and determining the value of 1 + 1, while System 2 takes on more
complicated, abstract decision making and calculations like 435 x 23.
Many of our mistakes, Kahneman writes, come when exhaustion or other
factors cause System 1 to do jobs better suited for System 2.
In a recent email interview, Kahneman explains the dangers of
overconfidence, why economists are still at the top of the policy-making
pecking order, and his good-natured gripe with the term “behavioral
economics.”
It seems like overconfidence is one of the big targets of Thinking, Fast and Slow.
Unfortunately, there’s some evidence that people are more drawn to
those who exhibit this tendency, even when it isn’t warranted (such as
political prognosticators). How do we get around our ingrained
tendencies to be attracted to those who loudly proclaim easy answers?
This is most difficult where it matters the most, in running a
democracy. People like leaders who look like they are dominant,
optimistic, friendly to their friends, and quick on the trigger when it
comes to enemies. They like boldness and despise the appearance of
timidity and protracted doubt. Here, the hope for the selection of
qualified leaders is in serious and critical media, but the incentives
of popular media favor mirroring the preferences of the public, however
misguided.
Prospects are quite a bit better for the selection of good leaders in
organizations. In business enterprises as well as in politics, the more
assertive and confident individuals have a big advantage, especially if
they are also lucky and achieve a few early successes. But organizations
are better placed to evaluate people by substantive achievements and by
their contributions to the conversation. They can apply slow thinking
to the selection of leaders, and they should.
Do you see any resistance to the ideas in Thinking, Fast and Slow from people who don’t want to acknowledge how error-prone the human brain can be under certain circumstances?
Amos Tversky and I encountered this kind of resistance to our early
work, which was focused mostly on errors of judgment, rather than on
intelligent performance. Some people chose to infer that we believed
humans to be feeble-minded, which we never did. Thinking, Fast and Slow
is explicit in offering a view of the mind that deals with marvels as
well as flaws, and it has largely escaped the criticism that it is
biased against human nature. However, I have encountered some people,
especially in the field of finance, who can easily think of individuals
(often themselves, sometimes Warren Buffett) who understand the world
with far more precision than my book suggests anyone can.
What has it been like winning the Nobel Prize and seeing your
work explode in popularity without Amos Tversky around to share these
experiences with you?
The work was already quite well known before Amos’s death, and he knew
before he died that we had been nominated for the Nobel and were quite
likely to get it eventually. For him, the Nobel was one of many things
that he was going to miss by dying at 59, and certainly not the most
important. As for me, I never forget that the recognition I get is for
work that was done by a successful team of which I was lucky to be a
member.
It’s a complicated question, but what is the simplest, most
straightforward advice you’d give to someone who wants to make sure
their System 2 isn’t ceding certain important decisions and calculations
to System 1?
Not really a complicated question because the answers are not
surprising. Slow down, sleep on it, and ask your most brutal and least
empathetic close friends for their advice. Friends are sometimes a big
help when they share your feelings. In the context of decisions, the
friends who will serve you best are those who understand your feelings
but are not overly impressed by them. For example, one important source
of bad decisions is loss aversion, by which we put far more weight on
what we may lose than on what we may gain. Advisors are likely to give
us advice in which gains and losses are treated more neutrally—they are
more likely to adopt a broad and long-term view of our problem, less
likely than the affected individual to be swayed by the fears and hopes
of the moment.
You note in the foreword to the recently released The Behavioral Foundations of Public Policy
that economists have a “monopoly” on policy making, that “Like it or
not, it is a fact of life that economics is the only social science that
is generally recognized as relevant and useful by policy makers.” Why
is that?
Policy makers, like most people, normally feel that they already know
all the psychology and all the sociology they are likely to need for
their decisions. I don’t think they are right, but that’s the way it is.
On the other hand, people who have not studied economics are fully
aware of their ignorance. The use of mathematics adds a touch of magic
to economics. Indeed it makes perfect sense for economists to be the
interpreters of policy-relevant research, because they understand and
are trained to use big data. This, and the fact that policies always
involve tradeoffs and almost always involve money, explains the dominant
role of economics in policy.
When it comes to policy making, applications of social or cognitive psychology are now routinely labeled behavioral economics.
Something else has happened in recent years that is amusing, but also
frustrating for psychologists. When it comes to policy making,
applications of social or cognitive psychology are now routinely labeled
behavioral economics. The “culprits” in the appropriation of my
discipline are two of my best friends, Richard Thaler and Cass Sunstein.
Their joint masterpiece Nudge
is rich in policy recommendations that apply psychology to
problems—sometimes common-sense psychology, sometimes the scientific
kind. Indeed, there is far more psychology than economics in Nudge. But because one of the authors of Nudge is
the guru of behavioral economics, the book immediately became the
public definition of behavioral economics. The consequence is that
psychologists applying their field to policy issues are now seen as
doing behavioral economics. As a result, they are almost forced to
accept the label of behavioral economists, even if they are as innocent
of economic knowledge as I am. Furthermore, these psychologists are
rewarded by greater attention to their ideas, because they benefit from
the higher credibility that comes to credentialed economists.
Obviously you (and Eldar Shafir, and other researchers) are
hoping to change this, to have psychology better represented at the
policy-making table. Where do you think Thinking, Fast and Slow
has fit into this effort, and what’s next in the ongoing attempt to
weave psychological findings more tightly into public policy?
The intrepid readers who get close to the end of my long tome will find
an enthusiastic endorsement of the policy applications that have come
under the label of behavioral economics. I am very optimistic about the
future of that work, which is characterized by achieving medium-sized
gains by nano-sized investments. But I hope that the work will
eventually be recognized for what it is and relabeled. In the U.K., for
example, there is a unit doing that work at 10 Downing Street. Its
informal name is “the Nudge Unit” and its formal name is the
“Behavioural Insights Team.” It is headed by a psychologist. The value
of proper labeling is that good psychologists are more likely to be
drawn to participate in efforts that explicitly recognize their
discipline.
What’s so powerful about the rational actor model? Do you think
economists will ever willingly give up those parts of it which should be
discarded?
Think of the kind of market that Adam Smith described. You can get a lot
of insight into how just the right amount of bread gets to London in
the morning by assuming that the baker and the other participants in the
market pursue their own interests in a sensible manner. The
rational-agent model takes this idea to its logical extreme. If you want
to predict the behavior of a market, you are best off assuming
individual agents who act in a way that is predictable and fairly
simple—for example by assuming that the participants are similarly
motivated and exploit all their opportunities. I am not an economist,
but I find it hard to imagine that they will ever give up the use of
schematic individual agents, even if they endow these agents with a
little more realistic psychology. And I see no reason why they should.
The rational agent model has more questionable consequences in the
domain of policy because the assumption that individuals are rational in
the pursuit of their interests has an ideological coloring and policy
implications that many would view as unfortunate. If individuals are
rational, there is no need to protect them against their own choices. At
the extreme, no need for Social Security or for laws that compel
motorcycle riders to wear helmets. It is not an accident that the
department of economics at the University of Chicago, one of the most
illustrious in the world, is known both for its adherence to a strict
version of the rational actor model and for very conservative politics.
It seems as though there are many areas in which economists and
psychologists are vying for the same public-policy space. How do you get
around the fact that economists can produce elegant models, nifty
graphs, and the like (even when the underlying ideas aren’t sturdy), but
psychology research isn’t always quite so easy to present to policy
makers in a shiny, impressive-looking way?
You should not play down psychologists’ ability to turn out nifty Power
Point slides. More seriously, I see much more collaboration than
competition between psychologists and economists in the domain of
policy, and my only quibble is with the label. I would like them all,
when they collaborate, to call themselves behavioral scientists. The
synergy is evident in policy books such as Cass Sunstein’s Simpler and the forthcoming Scarcity: Why Having Too Little Means So Much, by Sendhil Mullainathan and Eldar Shafir which deals with both the economics and the psychology of poverty.
Editor's note: A previous version of this article incorrectly
identified the University of Chicago as Chicago University. The post has
since been updated.
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