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Consistent Intertemporal Decision Making.

Authors :
Blackorby, Charles
Nissen, David
Primont, Daniel
Russell, R. Robert
Source :
Review of Economic Studies; Apr73, Vol. 40 Issue 2, p239, 10p
Publication Year :
1973

Abstract

A plan for an intertemporal consumer (or society) is a (constrained optimum) specification of consumption behaviour from the present to the end of his life (or time horizon). If an individual cannot dictate his future behaviour, he may be inconsistent (Strotz); that is, he may, as time passes, revise his specified future behaviour. Among the many unpleasant features of inconsistent planning is that if an individual behaves myopically ("naively", cf. Pollak) by continually executing the present portion of his plan, his behaviour, ex post, makes no sense from any point of view. This paper presents alternative ways of looking at intertemporal behaviour, and examines the conditions under which such behaviour is consistent. In Section III, we show that naive intertemporal optimization is consistent only if intertemporal preferences are structured so that the future is functionally separable from the present. In Section IV, we discuss "sophisticated solutions", which have been suggested, as a planning strategy when the intertemporal preference ordering does not satisfy the necessary condition for consistent naive planning. We prove an existence and uniqueness theorem for sophisticated solutions and find the necessary and sufficient conditions for the "sophisticated" choice functions to be generated by conventional utility maximization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00346527
Volume :
40
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Review of Economic Studies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
4618313
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2307/2296650