Measurement Error, Luck and Risk-Taking by University Students in a Repeated Risky Investment Game

By Emma Susanna Hidas

The paper "Measurement Error, Luck and Risk-Taking by University Students in a Repeated Risky Investment Game" written by Stein Holden, Sarah Ephrida Tione, Mesfin Tilahun and Samson Katengeza has been published in the Social Science Research Network (SSRN), June 2023.

The paper is published as a  New Journal Paper  and can be downloaded here . 

Abstract of the Paper 
We study whether luck in a repeated risky investment game can contribute to measurement errors and also help improve the predictive power of the game. We investigate how good and bad luck affect risk-taking behavior in the following rounds of the game. The luck outcome of the previous round is known when the subjects decide how risky their next choice in the game will be. A sample of 720 university students is used as subjects in the game in a recursive within-subject design. The results demonstrate a strong impact of luck on risk-taking behavior that lasts not only to the next round but also into another two follow-up rounds, with cumulative effects. A time delay of 1-2 months between Round 1 and Round 2 did not wipe out the luck effect and it was only marginally weaker than the luck effect from Round 2 to Rounds 3 and 4 that followed immediately after Round 2. Many recent studies have shown that risk preferences respond to shocks. This study indicates that random shocks such as luck in previous games (states of nature) influence risk-taking behaviour. On average, luck stimulates more risk-taking and bad luck less risk-taking.

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