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in the context of behavioral economics, which of the following best des…

Question

in the context of behavioral economics, which of the following best describes why someone might believe an item they own is more valuable?

the item was a gift from a close friend or family member.

the item is a rare or limited edition.

the item has sentimental value because it belongs to them.

the item is in high demand in the market.

question 16 0.5 pts

which of the following would best describe the endowment effect?

the tendency to assign more value to the things we already own than to the things we could own

the tendency to assign less value to the things we own than to the things we could own.

the tendency to refuse to sell something for less than you bought it.

the things that we have sold.

Explanation:

Response
First Question (Behavioral Economics - Why own item is more valuable)
Brief Explanations

In behavioral economics, the endowment effect (related to this) or sentimental value from ownership is key. The option "The item has sentimental value because it belongs to them" ties to how ownership creates perceived value (endowment effect - assigning more value to owned items). Other options: gift source (not about ownership - value from gifting, not ownership), rare/limited (market rarity, not ownership -driven), high demand (market demand, not ownership). So the correct option is about ownership -driven sentimental/value assignment.

Brief Explanations

The endowment effect is defined as the tendency to value owned items more than non - owned (potential) items. The first option "The tendency to assign more value to the things we already own than to the things we could own" matches this definition. The second option is the opposite. The third option is about loss aversion/price anchoring (not endowment effect). The last option is unclear and incorrect.

Answer:

The item has sentimental value because it belongs to them.

Question 16 (Describing Endowment Effect)