Abstract
In an article appearing concurrently with the present one, Matthew Ford and John Kay put forward their understanding of a decision theory which emerges in ergodicity economics. Their understanding leads them to believe that ergodicity economics evades the core problem of decisions under uncertainty and operates solely in a regime where there is no measurable uncertainty. If this were the case, then the authors’ critical stance would be justified and, as the authors point out, the decision theory would yield only trivial results, identical to a flavor of expected-utility theory. Here we clarify that the critique is based on a theoretical misunderstanding, and that uncertainty—quantified in any reasonable way—is large in the regime where the model operates. Our resolution explains the success of recent laboratory experiments, where ergodicity economics makes predictions different from expected-utility theory, contrary to the claim of equivalence by Ford and Kay. Also, a state of the world is identified where ergodicity economics outperforms expected-utility theory empirically.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 335-348 |
Number of pages | 14 |
Journal | Econ Journal Watch |
Volume | 20 |
Issue number | 2 |
Publication status | Published - Sept 2023 |
MoE publication type | B1 Non-refereed journal articles |
Keywords
- Ergodicity economics
- expected utility theory
- experiments
- random variable
- random walks
- stochastic process