Article

Expected utility or prospect theory maximisers? Assessing farmers' risk behaviour from field-experiment data

Géraldine Bocquého, Florence Jacquet, and Arnaud Reynaud

Abstract

We elicit the risk preferences of a sample of French farmers in a field-experiment setting, considering both expected utility and cumulative prospect theory. Under the EU framework, our results show that farmers are characterised by a concave utility function for gain outcomes implying risk aversion. The CPT framework confirms this result, but also suggests that farmers are twice as sensitive to losses as to gains and tend to pay undue attention to unlikely extreme outcomes. Accounting for loss aversion and probability weighting can make a difference in the design of effective and efficient policies, contracts or insurance schemes.

Keywords

Risk preferences; Experimental economics; Loss aversion; Probability weighting; France;

JEL codes

  • C93: Field Experiments
  • D81: Criteria for Decision-Making under Risk and Uncertainty
  • Q12: Micro Analysis of Farm Firms, Farm Households, and Farm Input Markets

Reference

Géraldine Bocquého, Florence Jacquet, and Arnaud Reynaud, Expected utility or prospect theory maximisers? Assessing farmers' risk behaviour from field-experiment data, European Review of Agricultural Economics, vol. 41, n. 1, 2014, pp. 135–172.

See also

Published in

European Review of Agricultural Economics, vol. 41, n. 1, 2014, pp. 135–172