Abstract
Using a unique field experiment from Canada, we estimate individual preference over
risk and time and show considerable heterogeneity in both dimensions and relatively
stable distributions across our various specifications, which include hyperbolic,
quasi-hyperbolic discounting as well as subjective failure probability over future
payments. We investigate the prediction power (transportability) of the estimated
preference parameters when used to explain the take-up decision of higher education
grants where financial stakes are approximately seven to fifty times larger than the
cash transfers used to elicit preferences. We find that both long-run discount factors
and subjective payment failure risk parameters have a high degree of transportability
across tasks, while parameters characterizing short-run discount preferences are irrelevant
when considering higher-stakes decisions.
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