Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9552765 Insurance: Mathematics and Economics 2005 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
This paper shows that, identifying individuals with their utility functions, −v‴(x)/v″(x)≤−u‴(x)/u″(x) for all x implies that individual v's optimal choice of self-protection expenditure is larger than individual u's, provided that marginal increases in self-protection expenditure from u's optimal choice are mean-preserving. The result clarifies the relationship between self-protection and downside risk aversion and underscores the interpretation of −u‴(x)/u″(x) as a measure of the strength of u's downside risk aversion relative to his own risk aversion because a mean-preserving increase in self-protection expenditure is shown to effect a special combination of a downside risk increase and a mean-preserving contraction.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Mathematics Statistics and Probability
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