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2013/2014  KAN-CMF_BECO  Behavioural Economics

English Title
Behavioural Economics

Course information

Language English
Exam ECTS 7.5 ECTS
Type Mandatory
Level Full Degree Master
Duration One Quarter
Course period Third Quarter
Time Table Please see course schedule at e-Campus
Study board
Study Board for BSc/MSc in Business Administration and Philosophy, MSc
Course coordinator
  • Thomas Poulsen - Department of International Economics and Management (INT)
Main academic disciplines
  • Business psychology
  • Business Ethics, value based management and CSR
  • Economic and organizational sociology
Last updated on 08-07-2013
Learning objectives
Learning objectives
This course provides students with a critical view on financial economics – standard models and assumptions including of course the idea of rational markets – based on what we know about personal and market behavior; it is an introduction to a critique that takes as its premise that financial decision-making and investor behavior are not necessarily driven by rational considerations but by aspects of personal and market psychology.
  • to advance students’ understanding of financial markets by recognizing the biases and errors of judgment to which all of us are prone
  • strengthen the students ability to analyze and manage complex financial decisions
  • strengthen students’ ability to support or assess financial and managerial decision-making in all types of firms and organizations
  • Through various exercises and experiments students will moreover get familiar with their own behavioral profile.
Examination
Behavioural Economics:
Examination form Home assignment - written product
Individual or group exam Individual
Size of written product Max. 10 pages
Assignment type Written assignment
Duration 48 hours to prepare
Grading scale 7-step scale
Examiner(s) One internal examiner
Exam period April
Make-up exam/re-exam
Same examination form as the ordinary exam
Course content and structure
Purpose
The purpose of this course is to enable students to understand economic theories of the market in general and financial markets in particular on their own terms while at the same time identifying more philosophical themes related to for example rationality, efficiency, value and pricing inherent in these theories.
 
This double understanding of markets should enable students not only to reflect critically about mainstream economic theory but also articulate this critique on the terms of economic theory itself. In the wider context of the CM(fil.) master, the idea of this course is to activate philosophical thinking from inside economics rather than the other way around.
Teaching methods
Structure
This course begins by reviewing the foundations of modern finance – to make sense of how psychology impacts individuals and markets it is necessary to take this step back –, its inability to account for various paradoxes and anomalies, and the genesis of behavioral finance. Expected utility and market efficiency are the first topics to be covered and discussed. Philosophical themes covered in this part include rationality, utilitarism (ethics), and empiricism (epistemology).

These central theoretical developments have subsequently proved incomplete as individuals’ actual choices violate a number of important assumptions. For example, the assumption of risk aversion proved to be poorly grounded in actual behavior as did market efficiency and the capital assets pricing model. (Social) Psychology provided a number of interesting alternative explanations that naturally call for philosophical scrutiny: Prospect theory, heuristics and biases, overconfidence, and social forces. Philosophical themes include power, emotions and nudging (paternalism).
The final part of the course describes how psychological biases have the potential to impact the behavior of managers. Both the abilities of rational managers to take action when markets are believed to reflect irrationality and the possibility that managers are themselves the source of bias are addressed. Here, the philosophical purpose is to abstract what is valid from all realms. Some 'debiasing' strategies will also be covered.
Expected literature
·         Behavioral Finance (Psychology, Decision-Making, and Markets), 1st edition, 2010. Lucy F. Ackert and Richard Deaves. South-Western, Cengage Learning.
·         A selection of topical papers.
Last updated on 08-07-2013