QUESTION IMAGE
Question
- how do behavioral economists view people differently than traditional economists?
ready? enter your answer here
Traditional economists assume people are perfectly rational, self-interested, and make optimal decisions with full information. Behavioral economists integrate psychology, arguing people have cognitive biases, limited self-control, and often make decisions based on heuristics, emotions, and social context rather than strict rational optimization.
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
Traditional economists view people as perfectly rational, self-interested actors who consistently make optimal, utility-maximizing decisions with complete information. In contrast, behavioral economists recognize that human decision-making is flawed: people are boundedly rational (have limited cognitive capacity), are influenced by cognitive biases, emotions, social norms, and heuristics, and often lack full self-control, leading to decisions that deviate from strict rational optimization.