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Imagine making choices in the following situation to test your degree of risk av

ID: 2672981 • Letter: I

Question

Imagine making choices in the following situation to test your degree of risk aversion. Someone offers you the choice between the following game and a sure thing:

The game: A coin is tossed. If it turns up heads, you get a million dollars. If it's tails, you get nothing.

The sure thing: You're given $500,000.

a. What is the expected value of each option?

b. Which option would you choose?

c. Viewing the options as probability distributions, which has the larger variance? What is the variance of the sure thing? (no calculations)

d. Suppose the game is changed to offer a payoff of $1.2 million for a head but still offers nothing for tails. The sure thing remains at $500,000. What is the expected value of each option? Which option would you choose now?

e. Most people would have chosen the sure thing in part (d). Assuming you did too, how much would the game's payoff have to increase before you would choose it over the sure thing?

Explanation / Answer

  a.                                 Return           Prob                 Ret ´ Prob

             Game:             $1,000,000    .5                     $500,000

                                                0        .5                                0

                                                                                    $500,000

   Sure Thing:                           $500,000    1.0                               $500,000

b.       Most people would choose the sure thing.

c.       The game. Zero.

d.                              Return              Prob                             Ret ´ Prob

         Game                  $1,200,000    .5                     $600,000

                                                0        .5                                0

                                                                                    $600,000

     Sure Thing                            $500,000    1.0                               $500,000

     Most would still choose the sure thing.

e.       Personal preference.