On Intertemporal Selfishness: How the Perceived Instability of Identity Underlies Impatient Consumption
17 Pages Posted: 4 Oct 2011
Date Written: January 4, 2011
Abstract
How does the anticipated connectedness between one’s current and future identity help explain impatience in intertemporal preferences? The less consumers are closely connected psychologically to their future selves, the less willing they will be to forgo immediate benefits in order to ensure larger deferred benefits to be received by that future self. When consumers’ measured or manipulated sense of continuity with their future selves is lower, they accept smaller-sooner rewards, wait less in order to save money on a purchase, require a larger premium to delay receiving a gift card, and have lower long-term discount rates.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Psychological Connectedness and Intertemporal Choice
By Daniel M. Bartels and Lance Rips
-
Do Groups Lie More than Individuals? Honesty and Deception as a Function of Strategic Self-Interest
By Taya R. Cohen, Brian Gunia, ...
-
Introducing the GASP Scale: A New Measure of Guilt and Shame Proneness
By Taya R. Cohen, Scott Wolf, ...
-
By Hal Hershfield, Taya R. Cohen, ...
-
Forceful Phantom Firsts: Framing Experiences as Firsts Amplifies Their Influence on Judgment
By Robyn A. Leboeuf, Elanor F. Williams, ...
-
Motivated To Get It Right: Closing the Gap Between Group and Individual Decision Quality
-
The Fresh Start Effect: Temporal Landmarks Motivate Aspirational Behavior
By Hengchen Dai, Katherine L. Milkman, ...
-
By Daniel M. Bartels, Trevor H. Kvaran, ...