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On the informational content of advice: a theoretical and experimental study
Authors:Yaw Nyarko  Andrew Schotter  Barry Sopher
Affiliation:(1) Department of Economics, New York University, 269 Mercer Street, New York, NY 10003, USA;(2) Department of Economics, Rutgers University, 75 Hamilton St., NJ Hall Room 202, New Brunswick, NJ 08901-1248, USA
Abstract:This paper examines the market for advice and the underlying perception that advice is useful and informative. We do this by first providing a theoretical examination of the informational content of advice and then by setting up a series of experimental markets where this advice is sold. In these markets we provide bidders with a demographic profile of the “experts” offering advice.The results of our experiment generate several interesting findings. The raw bid data suggest that subjects bid significantly more for data than they do for advice. Second, in the market for advice there appears to be no consensus as to who are the best advisors although on average economists demand the highest mean price and women suffer a discount. In addition, we find that whether a subject suffers from a representativeness bias in the way he or she processes data has an impact on how he or she bids for advice and on his or her willingness to follow it once offered. Finally, we find that on average people impute a low level of informativeness onto advice, consistent with their bidding behavior for data versus advice.This work was done under grant number SES-0425118 of the National Science Foundation. The authors would like to recognize the Center for Experimental Social Science at New York University for its additional support. We also acknowledge the help of Elizabeth Potamites for her research assistance.
Keywords:Advice  Decision making  Risk aversion  Experiments
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