Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Christoph Breunig, Steffen Huck, Tobias Schmidt, Georg Weizsäcker
In: The Economic Journal 131 (2021), 638, 2413-2446
We study an investment experiment with a representative sample of German households. Respondents invest in a safe asset and a risky asset whose return is tied to the German stock market. Experimental investments correlate with beliefs about stock market returns and exhibit desirable external validity at least in one respect: they predict real-life stock market participation. But many households are unresponsive to an exogenous increase in the risky asset’s return. The data analysis and a series of additional laboratory experiments suggest that task complexity decreases the responsiveness to incentives. Modifying the safe asset’s return has a larger effect on behaviour than modifying the risky asset’s return.