Rational Choice Theory as (Mis)Applied to Consumer Spending and Decision-Making: Implications for Management
The recent economic downturn seems to have been precipitated by a series of bad decisions made by consumers -- at the encouragement of opportunistic loan officers and organizations that ought to have known better and in many instances probably did -- in selecting loan products that they could not afford. While many companies and individuals walked away from the sudden fallout in the credit market wit great sums of cash, those that had purchased securities backed by bundled mortgages found themselves with virtually worthless assets, and the entire credit market crumbled. It would seem that somewhere along the line, a great number of people made choices-based either on faulty and perhaps even deliberately misleading information or an abysmal lack of foresight -- and often perhaps both.
This calls into question of the dominant theories regarding consumer choice and economic behavior general: rational choice. Simply put, rational choice theory assumes that consumers and other economic actors think rationally about their decisions and make economic and spending decisions after assessing the costs and benefits as accurately as they are able to (Scott 2000; Huebsch 2010). This leads to some degree of predictability in consumer behavior and provides a clear platform for the analysis of past economic actions and events; if people act rationally according to an assessment of the costs and benefits of each economic decision they make, then any situation can be analyzed based on their perception of costs and benefits.
It is far from certain that rational choice theory is actually applicable in all or even many situations, however, and in fact there are a multitude of empirical studies and pieces of theoretical research that suggest several entirely different models of decision-making and economic behavior are more accurate in different scenarios (Miller et al. 1996; Jacoby 2000). The number of poor long-term decisions that many consumers make appear to be far more rationalized than simply rational; that is, people often convince themselves that they are making rational decisions even when it is clear that they are acting...
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