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Showing posts with the label Decision-Making

You, Your Brain and Credit Cards

A basic assumption in economics and business finance is that individuals are rational in the sense that they compare the cost and benefits of a decision. Generally, this means comparing the cost of investing or consuming today to the expected benefits in the future. Cost is usually the price of the product or investment; expected benefits are harder to figure. The rule is simple; if the expected benefits are greater than the cost, buy it. If not, donā€™t. Even if the cost is spread out into the future ā€“ a car paid for with a cash down payment and a car loan ā€“ it is relatively easy in theory to discount future costs along with expected benefits back to ā€œpresent valueā€ (todayā€™s dollars) and do the comparison. One question that economics and finance doesnā€™t ask is: Does how you make a purchase or investment affect the buying decision? Does it matter if you pay cash or use a credit card? Theoretically, the answer is no. But recent neuroscience research indicates that the answer...