Logo image
Magnitude effects and decreasing impatience in temporal discounting: models, evidence, and applications
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Magnitude effects and decreasing impatience in temporal discounting: models, evidence, and applications

Manel Baucells and Alessandra Cillo
Journal of economic behavior & organization, Vol.246(June 2026), pp.1-15
2026
Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-105036241186
Web of Science ID: WOS:001751625300001

Abstract

Decreasing impatience Discounting Magnitude effect Retention bonus
Many factors influence how individuals discount future payouts. A robust factor is the magnitude effect, whereby a small payout is discounted more than a larger one. But when individuals are confronted with more than one future payout, what drives the magnitude effect? Using a ceteris paribus design, we find that the discount rate decreases with the sum of cash flows and the highest cash flow. We also consider a separable model with cash-flow specific discount rates, but find mixed support for it. We also observe decreasing impatience, and propose various parametric models to predict present equivalents. To test these models out-of-sample, we design a retention bonus whose goal is to keep employees as highly motivated as possible during an extended period of time. All models that account for magnitude effect do a good out-of-sample job, whereas the models that merely account for decreasing impatience do not. Thus, our research can aid individuals, managers, and regulatory agencies better predict how individuals perceive financial offerings.
pdf
9910011348307051264.54 MB
Published (Version of record) Ask the Library / Chiedi alla Biblioteca Restricted Access

Metrics

2 File views/ downloads
1 Record Views

Details

Logo image