14. Risk Aversion
A related concept to loss aversion is risk aversion.
What Is Risk Aversion?
Risk aversion is our preference for more concrete and certain outcomes over uncertain (or risky) outcomes. This phenomenon was first described and has been extensively studied in the context of economic decision-making (Kahneman & Tversky, 1979). However, it can also be relevant in daily contexts, including social situations.
Example: Making plans
Imagine you are on a trip with a group of friends. You’ve arrived at your destination and start making plans for the next day — you want to do something active outdoors. Do you go on a hike up the nearby mountain, or do you rent bikes and explore the town?
What would you choose, and why?
How can risk aversion affect your choice? How about other biases?[4]
There have been arguments that risk aversion has an evolutionary basis — making decisions that lead to more predictable and certain outcomes promotes survival (Zhang et al., 2014). That said, many factors play a significant role in and affect the degree to which an individual is risk averse, including:
- experience
- culture
- context
- personal factors
- (e.g., Brooks & Sokol-Hessner, 2020; Eckel & Grossman, 2008; Yuen & Lee, 2003; Wang et al., 2022)
As noted above, risk aversion is related to loss aversion. If the outcomes of a choice are unknown, even if they could be either positive or negative, we are prone to avoid this choice because we attribute more weight to the negative (i.e. the loss).
Example: Relationships
If you are single, risk aversion could keep you from starting a relationship — even if you are unhappy being alone.
If you are in a relationship, risk aversion could keep you from ending it and becoming single — even if you are unhappy in it.
Can you explain why? Can you see other biases in play here? [5]
Behavioural and neuroscientific evidence suggests that the underlying mechanism of risk aversion may have to do with emotions, specifically apprehensiveness of the unknown and (the anticipation of) the experience of regret (e.g., Coricelli et al., 2005; Mellers et al., 1997).