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Consumer Choices Don’t Always Make Sense

Dare to Know
5 min readJun 11, 2022

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Consumer choices are supposed to be based on rational self-interest. Find out how a new study explains why we often make sub-optimal decisions that barely meet our needs.

As the pandemic winds down, it’s nice to be out browsing around in local shops again. Like most people, I’d gotten into the habit of buying most things online over the past couple of years.

One thing I’ve noticed is the number of deals, discounts and virutal coupons online retailers issue. Just about everything that arrives in the mail from an online vendor comes with some sort of passcode offering a discount on my next purchase.

Economists who study how we respond to these offers call their field behavioral economics. Traditionally, it’s been based on the principle that individuals make rational consumer choices based on logical calculations.

Should Align with Self-Interest and Personal Objectives

Traditional economists assume the spending choices people make align a transaction’s outcome with their self-interest and personal objectives. Adam Smith was probably the first economist to raise this idea as part of his idea of the “invisible hand.”

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Dare to Know
Dare to Know

Written by Dare to Know

Dare to Know, published by David Morton Rintoul, is for those who find meaning in stories about our Universe, Life, and Humanity.

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