Thaler Mktsci1985
Thaler Mktsci1985
Thaler Mktsci1985
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless
you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you
may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use.
Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at
http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=informs.
Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed
page of such transmission.
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of
content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms
of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.
INFORMS is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Marketing Science.
http://www.jstor.org
MARKETING SCIENCE
Vol. 4, No. 3, Summer 1985
Printed in U.S.A.
1. Introduction
199
0732-2399/85/0404/0199/$01.25
Copyright ? 1985, The Institute of Management Sciences/Operations Research Society of America
200 RICHARD THALER
anecdotes above. Each of these anecdotes illustrate a type of behavior where a mental
accounting system induces an individual to violate a simple economic principle. Example
1 violates the principle of fungibility. Money is not supposed to have labels attached to
it. Yet the couples behaved the way they did because the $300 was put into both "windfall
gain" and "food" accounts. The extravagant dinner would not have occurred had each
couple received a yearly salary increase of $150, even though that would have been worth
more in present value terms. Example 2 illustrates that accounts may be both topically
and temporally specific. A player's behavior in a poker game is altered by his current
position in that evening's game, but not by either his lifetime winnings or losings nor by
some event allocated to a different account altogether such as a paper gain in the stock
market. In example 3 the violation of fungibility (at obvious economic costs) is caused
by the household's appreciation for their own self-control problems. They are afraid that
if the vacation home account is drawn down it will not be repaid, while the bank will
see to it that the car loan is paid off on schedule. Example 4 illustrates the curious fact
that people tend to give as gifts items that the recipients would not buy for themselves,
and that the recipients by and large approve of the strategy.As is shown in ?4.3, this also
violates a microeconomic principle.
The theory of consumer behavior to which the current theory is offered as a substitute
is the standard economic theory of the consumer. That theory, of course, is based on
normative principles. In fact, the paradigm of economic theory is to first characterize
the solution to some problem, and then to assume the relevant agents (on average) act
accordingly.
The decision problem which consumers are supposed to solve can be characterized in
a simple fashion. Let z = {zi, ..., zi, ..., Zn} be the vector of goods available in the
economy at prices given by the corresponding vector p = { pi, * * * Pi, * * * Pn }. Let the
consumer's utility function be defined as U(z) and his income (or wealth) be given as I.
Then the consumer should try to solve the following problem:
The first order conditions to this problem are, in essence, the economic theory of the
consumer. Lancaster (1971) has extended the model by having utility depend on the
characteristicsof the goods. Similarly, Becker (1965) has introduced the role of time and
other factors using the concept of household production. These extended theories are
richerthan the original model, and, as a result, have more to offermarketing.Nevertheless,
the economic theory of the consumer, even so extended, has not found widespread ap-
plication in marketing. Why not? One reason is that all such models omit virtually all
marketing variables except price and product characteristics. Many marketing variables
fall into the category that Tversky and Kahneman (1981) refer to as framing. These
authors have shown that often choices depend on the way a problem is posed as much
as on the objective features of a problem. Yet within economic theory, framing cannot
alter behavior.
To help describe individual choice under uncertainty in a way capable of capturing
"mere" framing effects as well as other anomalies, Kahneman and Tversky (1979) have
developed "prospecttheory" as an alternativeto expected utility theory. Prospect theory's
sole aim is to describe or predict behavior, not to characterizeoptimal behavior. Elsewhere
(Thaler 1980), I have begun to develop a similar descriptivealternativeto the deterministic
economic theory of consumer choice. There I argue that consumers often fail to behave
MENTAL ACCOUNTING AND CONSUMER CHOICE 201
in accordance with the normative prescriptions of economic theory. For example, con-
sumers often pay attention to sunk costs when they shouldn't, and underweight oppor-
tunity costs as compared to out-of-pocket costs.'
This paper uses the concept of mental accounting to move furthertoward a behaviorally
based theory of consumer choice. Compared to the model in equation (1) the alternative
theory has three key features. First, the utility function U(x) is replaced with the value
function v( ) from prospect theory. The characteristicsof this value function are described
and then extended to apply to compound outcomes. Second, price is introduced directly
into the value function using the concept of a referenceprice. The new concept of trans-
action utility is developed as a result. Third, the normative principle of fungibility is
relaxed. Numerous marketing implications of the theory are derived. The theory is also
used to explain some empirical puzzles.
2. Mental Arithmetic
code outcomes? To some extent people try to frame outcomes in whatever way makes
them happiest.3Second, individuals may have preferencesabout how their life is organized.
Would most people rather have a salary of $30,000 and a (certain) bonus of $5,000 or
a salary of $35,000? Third, and most relevant to marketing, how would a seller want to
describe (frame) the characteristicsof a transaction?Which attributesshould be combined
and which should be separated? The analysis which follows can be applied to any of
these perspectives.
For the joint outcome (x, y) there are four possible combinations to consider:
1. Multiple Gains. Let x > 0 and y > 0.4 Since v is concave v(x) + v(y) > v(x + y),
so segregation is preferred. Moral: don't wrap all the Christmas presents in one box.
2. Multiple Losses. Let the outcomes be -x and -y where x and y are still positive.
Then since v(-x) + v(-y) < v(-(x + y)) integration is preferred. For example, one
desirable feature of credit cards is that they pool many small losses into one larger loss
and in so doing reduce the total value lost.
3. Mixed Gain. Consider the outcome (x, -y) where x > y so there is a net gain. Here
v(x) + v(-y) < v(x - y) so integration is preferred. In fact, since the loss function is
steeper than the gain function, it is possible that v(x) + v(-y) < 0 while v(x - y) must
be positive since x > y by assumption. Thus, for mixed gains integration amounts to
cancellation. Notice that all voluntarily executed trades fall into this category.
4. Mixed Loss. Consider the outcome (x, -y) where x < y, a net loss. In this case we
cannot determine without further information whether v(x) + v(-y) ~ v(x - y). This is
illustrated in Figure 1. Segregation is preferred if v(x) > v(x - y) - v(-y). This is more
likely the smaller is x relative to y. Intuitively, with a large loss and a small gain, e.g.,
($40, -$6000) segregation is preferred since v is relatively flat near -6000. This will be
referredto as the "silver lining" principle. On the other hand, for ($40, -$50) integration
is probably preferredsince the gain of the $40 is likely to be valued less than the reduction
of the loss from $50 to $10, nearly a case of cancellation.
The previous analysis can be summarized by four principles: (a) segregate gains, (b)
integrate losses, (c) cancel losses against largergains, (d) segregate"silver linings". To see
whether these principles coincided with the intuition of others, a small experiment was
conducted using 87 students in an undergraduate statistics class at Cornell University.
The idea was to present subjects with pairs of outcomes either segregated or integrated
and to ask them which frame was preferable.Four scenarioswere used, one corresponding
to each of the above principles.
The instructions given to the students were:
Below you will find four pairs of scenarios. In each case two events occur in Mr. A's life and one
event occurs in Mr. B's life. You are asked to judge whether Mr. A or Mr. B is happier. Would most
people rather be A or B? If you think the two scenarios are emotionally equivalent, check "no
difference." In all cases the events are intended to be financially equivalent.
The four items used and the number of responses of each type follow.
3 This is illustrated by the following true story. A group of friends who play poker together regularlyhad an
outing in which they played poker in a large recreational vehicle while going to and from a race track. There
were significant asymmetries in the way people (honestly) reported their winnings and losings from the two
poker games and racetrack bets. Whether the outcomes were reported together or separately could largely be
explained by the analysis that follows.
4 For simplicity I will deal only with two-outcome events, but the principles generalize to cases with several
outcomes.
MENTAL ACCOUNTING AND CONSUMER CHOICE 203
VALUE
-Y (X-Y) GAINS
INTEGRATION
SEGREGATION
V(-Y)
INTEGRATION PREFERRED
VALUE
-Y GAINS
x
V(X)+V(-Y)
V (X-Y)
V (-Y)
SILVER LINING,
SEGREGATION PREFERRED
FIGURE 1
1. Mr. A was given tickets to lotteries involving the World Series. He won $50 in one lottery and
$25 in the other.
Mr. B was given a ticket to a single, larger World Series lottery. He won $75.
Who was happier? 56 A 16 B 15 no difference
2. Mr. A received a letter from the IRS saying that he made a minor arithmetical mistake on his
tax return and owed $100. He received a similar letter the same day from his state income tax
authority saying he owed $50. There were no other repercussions from either mistake.
204 RICHARD THALER
Mr. B received a letter from the IRS saying that he made a minor arithmetical mistake on his tax
return and owed $150. There were no other repercussions from his mistake.
Who was more upset? 66 A 14 B 7 no difference
3. Mr. A bought his first New York State lottery ticket and won $100. Also, in a freak accident,
he damaged the rug in his apartment and had to pay the landlord $80.
Mr. B bought his first New York State lottery ticket and won $20.
Who was happier? 22 A 61 B 4 no difference
4. Mr. A's car was damaged in a parking lot. He had to spend $200 to repair the damage. The
same day the car was damaged, he won $25 in the office football pool.
Mr. B's car was damaged in a parking lot. He had to spend $175 to repairthe damage.
Who was more upset? 19 A 63 B 5 no difference
For each item, a large majority of the subjects chose in a manner predicted by the
theory.5
Suppose an individual is expecting some outcome x and instead obtains x + Ax. Define
this as a reference outcome (x + Ax: x). The question then arises how to value such an
outcome. Assume that the expected outcome was fully anticipated and assimilated. This
implies that v(x: x) = 0. A person who opens his monthly pay envelope and finds it to
be the usual amount is unaffected. However, when Ax+ 0 there is a choice of ways to
frame the outcome corresponding to the segregation/integrationanalysis of simple com-
pound outcomes. With reference outcomes the choice involves whether to value the
unexpected component Ax alone (segregation) or in conjunction with the expected com-
ponent (integration). An example, similar to those above, illustrates the difference:
* Mr. A expected a Christmas bonus of $300. He received his check and the amount
was indeed $300. A week later he received a note saying that there had been an error in
this bonus check. The check was $50 too high. He must return the $50.
* Mr. B expected a Christmas bonus of $300. He received his check and found it was
for $250.
It is clear who is more upset in this story. Mr. A had his loss segregatedand it would
inevitably be coded as a loss of $50. Mr. B's outcome can be integrated by viewing the
news as a reduction in a gain -[v(300) - v(250)]. When the situation is structured in a
neutralor ambiguous manner then the same four principlesdetermine whether segregation
or integration is preferred:
(1) An increase in a gain should be segregated.
(2) An increase in (the absolute value of) a loss should be integrated.
(3) A decrease in a gain should be integrated (cancellation).
(4) A small reduction in (the absolute value of) a loss should be segregated (silver
lining).
The concept of a reference outcome is used below to model a buyer's reaction to a
market price that differs from the price he expected.
5 Two caveats must be noted here. First, the analysis does not extend directly to the multi-attribute (or
multiple account) case. It is often cognitively impossible to integrate across accounts. Thus winning $100 does
not cancel a toothache. Second, even within the same account, individuals may be unable to integrate two
losses that are framed separately. See Johnson and Thaler (1985).
MENTAL ACCOUNTING AND CONSUMER CHOICE 205
Notice that the writer's sister is presumably getting a good value for her money (the
room is worth $185 per month) but is still unhappy. To incorporate this aspect of the
psychology of buying into the model, two kinds of utility are postulated: acquisition
utility and transaction utility. The former depends on the value of the good received
compared to the outlay, the latter depends solely on the perceived merits of the "deal".
For the analysis that follows, three price concepts are used. First, define p as the actual
price charged for some good z. Then for some individual, define p as the value equivalent
of z, that is, the amount of money which would leave the individual indifferent between
receiving p or z as a gift.6 Finally, let p* be called the referenceprice for z. The reference
price is an expected or "just" price for z. (More on p* momentarily.)
Now define acquisition utility as the value of the compound outcome (z, -p) = (p
-p). This is designated as v(f, -p). Acquisition utility is the net utility that accrues from
the trade of p to obtain z (which is valued at pf).Since v(p, -p) will generally be coded
as the integrated outcome v(p - p), the cost of the good is not treated as a loss. Given
the steepness of the loss function near the reference point, it is hedonically inefficient to
code costs as losses, especially for routine transactions.
The measure of transaction utility depends on the price the individual pays compared
to some reference price, p*. Formally, it is defined as the reference outcome v(-p: -p*),
that is, the value of paying p when the expected or reference price is p*. Total utility
from a purchase is just the sum of acquisition utility and transaction utility.7 Thus the
value of buying good z at price p with reference price p* is defined as w(z, p, p*) where:
6
In the standard theory, p equals the reservation price, the maximum the individual would pay. In this
theory, p can differ from the reservation price because of positive or negative transaction utility. Acquisition
utility is comparable in principle to consumer surplus.
7 A more
general formulation would be to allow differing weights on the two terms in (2). For example,
equation (2) could be written as
w(z, p, p*) = v(p, -p) + 3v(-p: -p*),
where df is the weight given to transaction utility. If , = 0 then the standardtheory applies. Pathological bargain
hunters would have d > 1. This generalization was suggested by Jonathan Baron.
206 RICHARD THALER
free by a friend) [which is what you paid for each ticket] {but you paid $10 each for your tickets
when you bought them from another student}. You get to the game early to make sure you get rid
of the ticket. An informal survey of people selling tickets indicates that the going price is $5. You
find someone who wants the ticket and takes out his wallet to pay you. He asks how much you want
for the ticket. Assume that there is no law against charging a price higher than that marked on the
ticket. What price do you ask for if
1. he is a friend
2. he is a stranger
What would you have said if instead you found the going market price was $10?
3. friend
4. stranger
The idea behind the questionnaire was that the price people would charge a friend
would be a good proxy for their estimate of a fair price. For each question, three prices
were available as possible anchors upon which people could base their answers: the price
marked on the ticket, the market price, and the price paid by the seller, i.e., cost. As can
be seen in Table 1, the modal answers in the friend condition are equal to the seller's
costs except in the unusual case where seller's cost was above market price. In contrast,
the modal answers in the stranger condition are equal to market price with the same
lone exception. The implication of this is that buyers' perceptions of a seller's costs will
strongly influence their judgments about what price is fair, and this in turn influences
their value for p*.
The next questionnaire, given to those participants in an executive development pro-
gram who said they were regularbeer drinkers,shows how transactionutility can influence
willingness to pay (and therefore demand).
Consider the following scenario:
You are lying on the beach on a hot day. All you have to drink is ice water. For the last hour you
have been thinking about how much you would enjoy a nice cold bottle of your favorite brand of
beer. A companion gets up to go make a phone call and offers to bring back a beer from the only
nearby place where beer is sold (a fancy resort hotel) [a small, run-down grocery store]. He says that
the beer might be expensive and so asks how much you are willing to pay for the beer. He says that
he will buy the beer if it costs as much or less than the price you state. But if it costs more than the
price you state he will not buy it. You trust your friend, and there is no possibility of bargainingwith
(the bartender) [store owner]. What price do you tell him?
The results from this survey were dramatic. The median price given in the fancy resort
hotel version was $2.65 while the median for the small run-down grocery store version
was $1.50. This difference occurs despite the following three features of this example:
1. In both versions the ultimate consumption act is the same-drinking one beer on
the beach. The beer is the same in each case.
TABLE I
Percent of Subjects Giving Common Answers to Hockey Ticket Question
Friend Stranger
Market
Cost Value 0 5 10 Other 0 5 10 Other
0 5 68 26 3 3 6 77 10 6
31 58 19
0 10 65 26 6 3 6 16
5 5 v= 14 79 0 7 0 79 7 14
N 28 0 14 57 29
5 10 72 79 4 9
10 5 0 69 23 8 0 42 46 12
10 10 0 15 69 15 0 0 73 27
sumption generally. The whole mental accounting apparatus being presented here can
be thought of as part of an individual's solution to these problems. For example, the rule
of thumb to restrict monthly expenditures to no more than monthly income is clearly
nonoptimal. Yet, when borrowing is permitted as a method of smoothing out monthly
k's, some families find themselves heavily in debt. Restrictions on borrowing are then
adopted as a second-best strategy. The technology of self-control often implies outright
prohibitions because allowing a little bit eventually leads to excesses. (Although smoking
cigarettes is undoubtedly subject to diminishing marginal utility, almost no one smokes
between 1 and 5 cigarettes a day. That level, while probably preferredby many smokers
and former smokers to either zero or 20, is just unattainable.)
Unusually high category specific k's are most likely to be observed for goods that are
particularly seductive or addictive. Unusually low k's are observed for goods viewed to
be particularly desirable in the long run such as exercise or education. Application of
these ideas to gift giving behavior is discussed below.
4. Marketing Implications
The previous sections have outlined a theory and presented some survey evidence to
support its various components. The following sections discuss the implications of this
theory to marketing. There are two types of implications presented here. First, the theory
is used to explain some empirical puzzles such as why some markets fail to clear. Second,
some advice for sellers is derived, based on the presumption that buyers behave according
to the theory. This advice is illustratedwith actual examples. The implications are derived
from each of the three main components of the theory: compounding principles, trans-
action utility, and budgetary rules.
4.1. Compounding Rule Implications
This section will illustrate how the results from the analysis of mental arithmetic can
influence marketing decisions either in the design or products or in the choice of how
products are described.The results of ?2.2 can be summarized by two principles:segregate
gains and integrate losses. Each principle also has a corollary: segregate "silver linings"
(small gains combined with large losses) and integrate (or cancel) losses when combined
with larger gains.
Segregate gains. The basic principle of segregating gains is simple and needs little
elaboration or illustration. When a seller has a product with more than one dimension
it is desirable to have each dimension evaluated separately. The most vivid examples of
this are the late-night television advertisements for kitchen utensils. The principle is used
at two levels. First, each of the items sold is said to have a multitude of uses, each of
which is demonstrated. Second, several "bonus" items are included "if you call right
now." These ads all seem to use the same basic format and are almost a caricature of
the segregation principle.
The silver lining principle can be used to understand the widespread use of rebates as
a form of price promotion. It is generally believed that rebates were first widely used
because of the threat of government price controls. By having an explicitly temporary
rebate it was hoped that the old price would be the one for which new regulations might
apply. Rebates for small items have the additional feature that not all consumers send
in the form to collect the rebate. However, rebates continue to be widely used in the
automobile industry in spite of the following considerations:
(1) Price controls seem very unlikely during the Reagan administration, especially
with inflation receding.
(2) All purchasers claim the rebate since it is processed by the dealer and is worth
several hundred dollars.
MENTAL ACCOUNTING AND CONSUMER CHOICE 209
(3) Consumers must pay sales tax on the rebate. This can raise the cost of the purchase
by 8%of the rebate in New York City. While this is not a large amount of money relative
to the price of the car, it nonetheless provides an incentive to adopt the seemingly equiv-
alent procedure of announcing a temporary sale.
Why then are rebates used in the automobile industry? The silver lining principle
suggest one reason. A rebate strongly suggests segregatingthe saving. This can be further
strengthened for those consumers who elect to have the rebate mailed to them from the
corporate headquarters rather than applied to the down payment.?1
Integrate losses. When possible, consumers would prefer to integrate losses. The con-
cavity of the loss function implies that adding $50 less to an existing $1000 loss will have
little impact if it is integrated. This means that sellers have a distinct advantage in selling
something if its cost can be added on to another larger purchase. Adding options to an
automobile or house purchaseare classic, well-known examples. More generally,whenever
a seller is dealing with an expensive item the seller should consider whether additional
options can be created since the buyers will have temporarily inelastic demands for these
options. The principle also appliesto insurancepurchases.Insurancecompanies frequently
sell riders to home or car insurance policies that are attractive (I believe) only because
of this principle. One company has been advertisinga "paint spill" riderfor its homeowner
policy. (This is apparently designed for do-it-yourselfers who have not yet discovered
drop cloths.) Another example is credit card insurance which pays for the first $50 of
charges against a credit card if it is lost or stolen. (Claims over $50 are absorbed by the
credit card company.)
The principle of cancellation states that losses will be integratedwith largergains where
plausible. The best example of this is withholding from paychecks. In the present frame-
work the least aversive type of loss is the reduction of a large gain. This concept seems
to have been widely applied by governments. Income taxes would be perceived as much
more aversive (in addition to being harder to collect) if the whole tax bill were due in
April. The implication for sellers is that every effort should be made to set up a payroll
withdrawal payment option. Probably the best way to market dental insurance, for ex-
ample, would be to sell it as an option to group health insurance through employers. If
the employee already pays for some share of the health insurance then the extra premium
would be framed as an increase in an existing deduction; this is the ultimate arrangement
for a seller.
4.2. Transaction Utility Implications
Sellouts and scalping. The tool in the economist's bag in which most economists
place the greatest trust is the supply and demand analysis of simple commodity markets.
The theory stipulates that prices adjust over time until supply equals demand. While the
confidence put in that analysis is generally well founded, there are some markets which
consistently fail to clear. One widely discussed example is labor markets where large
numbers of unemployed workers coexist with wages that are not falling. Unemployment
occurs because a price (the wage) is too high. Another set of markets features the opposite
problem, prices that are too low. I refer to the class of goods and services for which
demand exceeds supply: Cabbage Patch dolls in December 1983 and 1984, tickets to any
Super Bowl, World Series,World Cup Final, Vladimir Horowitz or Rolling Stones concert,
or even dinner reservations for 8:00 p.m. Saturdayevening at the most popular restaurant
in any major city. Why are these prices too low? Once the Cabbage Patch rage started,
the going black market price for a doll was over $100. Why did Coleco continue to sell
10In the firstyear that rebateswere widely used, one manufacturerreported(to me in personal
communication)
that about one-third of the customers receiving rebates chose the option of having the check sent separately.
My impression is that this has become less common as rebates have become widespread.
210 RICHARD THALER
the dolls it had at list price? Why did some discount stores sell their allotted number at
less than list price? Tickets for the 1984 Super Bowl were selling on the black market for
$300 and up. Seats on the 50-yard line were worth considerably more. Why did the
National Football League sell all of the tickets at the same $60 price?
There are no satisfactory answers to these questions within the confines of standard
microeconomic theory. In the case of the Super Bowl, the league surely does not need
the extra publicity generated by the ticket scarcity. (The argument that long lines create
publicity is sometimes given for why prices aren't higher during first week's showing of
the latest Star Wars epic.) The ticket scarcity occurs every year so (unlike the Cabbage
Patch Doll case) there is no possible surprise factor. Rather, it is quite clear that the
league knowingly sets the prices "too low". Why?
The concept of transaction utility provides a coherent, parsimonious answer. The key
to understanding the puzzle is to note that the under-pricing only occurs when two
conditions are present. First, the market clearing price is much higher than some well-
established normal (reference) price. Second, there is an ongoing pecuniary relationship
between the buyer and the seller. Pure scarcity is not enough. Rare art works, beachfront
property, and 25-carat diamonds all sell at (very high) market clearing prices.
Once the notion of transaction (dis)utility is introduced, then the role of the normal
or reference price becomes transparent. The goods and services listed earlier all have
such norms: prices of other dolls similar to Cabbage Patch dolls, regular season ticket
prices, prices of other concerts, dinner prices at other times or on other days, etc. These
well-established reference prices create significant transaction disutility if a much higher
price is charged.
The ongoing relationship between the buyer and the seller is necessary (unless the
seller is altruistic), else the seller would not care if transaction disutility were generated.
Again that ongoing relationship is present in all the cases described. Coleco couldn't
charge more for the dolls because it had plans for future sales to doll customers and even
nondoll buyers who would simply be offended by an unusually high price. Musical per-
formers want to sell record albums. Restaurants want to sell dinners at other times and
days. When a well-established reference price exists, a seller has to weigh the short-run
gain associated with a higher price against the long-run loss of good will and thus sales.
The pricing of sporting events provides a simple test of this analysis. For major sporting
events, the price of tickets should be closer to the market clearing price, the larger is the
share of total revenues the seller captures from the event in question. At one extreme
are league championships such as the World Series and the Super Bowl. Ticket sales for
these events are a tiny share of total league revenue. An intermediate case is the India-
napolis 500. This is an annual event, and is the sponsor's major revenue source, but
racegoers frequently come year after year so some ongoing relationship exists. At the
other extreme is a major championship fight. A boxing championship is a one-time affair
involving a promoter and two fighters.Those three parties are unlikely to be a partnership
again. (Even a rematch is usually held in a different city.) There is no significant long-
run relationship between the sellers and boxing fans.
While it is impossible to say what the actual market clearing prices would be, the
figures in Table 2 indicate that the predictions are pretty well confirmed. Good seats for
TABLE 2
Recent Prices for Major Sporting Events
the Super Bowl are probably the single item in greatest demand and are obviously un-
derpriced since even the worst seats sell out at $60.
Of course, some Super Bowl tickets and Cabbage Patch dolls do change hands at high
prices through scalpers. Since the black market price does rise to the market clearing
level, why do the sellers permit the scalpers to appropriatethese revenues? There are two
reasons. First, the transaction disutility generated by a high black market price is not
attributed to the original seller. The NFL sets a "fair" price; it is the scalper who is
obtaining the immoral rents." Second, in many cases the seller is really getting more
than the face value of the tickets. Tickets to the Super Bowl are distributed to team
owners in large numbers. Many of these tickets are resold to tour operators (see the next
section) at prices which are not made public. Similarly, tickets to the NCAA basketball
tournament finals are distributed in part to the qualifying teams. These tickets are sold
or given to loyal alumni. The implicit price for such tickets is probably in the thousands
of dollars.
Methods of raising price. A seller who has a monopoly over some popular product
may find that the price being charged is substantially less than the market clearing price.
How can price be raised without generating excessive negative transaction utility (and
thus loss of good will)? The theory provides three kinds of strategies that can be tried.
First, steps can be taken to increase the perceived reference price. This can be done in
several ways. One way is to explicitly suggest a high reference price (see next section).
Another way is to increase the perceived costs of the product, perhaps by providing
excessive luxury. As the hockey question showed, perceptions of fairness are affected by
costs. In the beer on the beach example, the owner of the run-down grocery store could
install a fancy bar. Notice that the extra luxury need not increase the value of the product
to the buyer; as long as p* is increased then demand will increase holding acquisition
utility constant. An illustration of this principle is that short best-selling books tend to
have fewer words per page (i.e., larger type and wider margins) than longer books. This
helps to raise p*.
A second general strategy is to increase the minimum purchase required and/or to tie
the sale of the product to something else. Because of the shape of the value function in
the domain of losses, a given price movement seems smaller the larger is the quantity
with which it is being integrated. The Super Bowl provides two illustrations of this phe-
nomenon. Tickets are usually sold by tour operators who sell a package including air
fare, hotel and game ticket. Thus the premium price for the ticket is attached to a con-
siderably largerpurchase. Also, hotels in the city of the Super Bowl (and in college towns
on graduation weekend) usually impose a three-night minimum. Since the peak demand
is for only one or two nights this allows the hotel to spread the premium room rate over
a larger purchase.
The third strategy is to try to obscure p* and thus make the transaction disutility less
salient. One simple way to do this is to sell the product in an unusual size or format,
one for which no well-established p* exists. Both of the last two strategies are used by
candy counters in movie theaters. Candy is typically sold only in large containers rarely
seen in other circumstances.
Suggested retail price.12 Many manufacturers offer a "suggested retail price" (SRP)
for their products. In the absence of fair trade laws, SRP's must be only suggestions, but
there are distinct differences across products in the relationship between market prices
and SRPs. In some cases the SRP is usually equal to the market price. In other cases the
i"Transferringthe transaction disutility is often a good strategy. One way this can be done is to turn over an
item for sale to an agent who will sell it at auction. The seller then bears less responsibility for the price.
12
This paragraphwas motivated by a discussion with Dan Horsky several years ago.
212 RICHARD THALER
SRP exceeds the market price by as much as 100%or more. What is the role of an SRP
that is twice the typical retail price? One possibility is that the SRP is being offered by
the seller as a "suggestedreference price." Then a lower selling price will provide positive
transaction utility. In addition, inexperienced buyers may use the SRP as an index of
quality. We would expect to observe a large differentialbetween price and the SRP when
both factors are present. The SRP will be more successful as a reference price the less
often the good is purchased. The SRP is most likely to serve as a proxy for quality when
the consumer has trouble determining quality in other ways (such as by inspection).
Thus, deep discounting relative to SRP should usually be observed for infrequently pur-
chased goods whose quality is hardto judge. Some examples include phonographcartridges
which usually sell at discounts of at least 50%, home furniture which is almost always
"on sale", and silver flatwarewhere "deep discounting-selling merchandiseto consumers
at 40% to 85% below the manufacturer's 'suggested retail price' has become widespread
in the industry".13
13See Business Week, March 29, 1982. This example was suggested by Leigh McAlister.
MENTAL ACCOUNTING AND CONSUMER CHOICE 213
the expensive beer only on specific occasions, such as at restaurantsor while on vacation.14
Advertisers may wish to suggest other occasions that should qualify as legitimate excuses
for indulgence. One example is Michelob's theme: "Weekends are made for Michelob."
However, their follow-up campaign may have taken a good idea too far: "Put a little
weekend in your week." Lowenbrau's ads stress a different category, namely, what beer
to serve to company. "Here's too good friends, tonight is something special. . ." While
impressing your friends is also involved here, again the theme is to designate specific
occasions when the beer k should be relaxed enough to purchase a high cost beer.
Another result of this analysis is that people may sometimes prefer to receive a gift in
kind over a gift in cash, again violating a simple principle of microeconomic theory. This
can happen if the gift is on a "forbidden list". One implication is that employers might
want to use gifts as part of their incentive packages.Some organizations(e.g., Tupperware)
rely on this type of compensation very heavily. Dealers are paid both in cash and with
a multitude of gift-type items: trips, furniture, appliances, kitchen utensils, etc. Since
most Tupperware dealers are women who are second-income earners, the gifts may be
a way for a dealer to:
(1) mentally segregate her earnings from total family income;
(2) direct the extra income toward luxuries; and
(3) increase her control over the spending of the extra income.15
Another similar example comes from the National Football League. For years the
league had trouble getting players to come to the year-end All-Star game. Many players
would beg off, reporting injuries. A few years ago the game was switched to Hawaii and
a free trip for the player's wife or girlfriend was included. Since then, no-shows have
been rare.
Conclusion. This paper has developed new concepts in three distinct areas: coding
gains and losses, evaluating purchases (transaction utility), and budgetary rules. In this
section I will review the evidence presented for each, describe some research in progress,
and suggest where additional evidence might be found.
The evidence on the coding of gains and losses comes from two kinds of sources. The
"who is happier" questions presented here are a rather direct test, though of a somewhat
soft variety. More researchalong these lines is under way using slightly differentquestions
such as "two events are going to happen to you, would you rather they occurred on the
same day or two weeks apart?"The two paradigmsdo not always lead to the same results,
particularly in the domain of losses (Johnson and Thaler 1985). The reasons for the
differences are interesting and subtle, and need further investigation. The other source
for data on these issues comes from the investigation of choices under uncertainty.
Kahneman and Tversky originally formulated their value function based on such choices.
In Johnson and Thaler (1985) we investigate how choices under uncertaintyare influenced
by very recent previous gains or losses. We find that previous gains and losses do influence
subsequent choices in ways that complicate any interpretation of the loss function. Some
of our data comes from experiments with real money and so are in some sense "harder"
than the who is happier data. Kahneman and Tversky are also investigating the multi-
attribute extension of prospect theory, and their results suggest caution in extending the
single attribute results.
The evidence presented on transaction utility was the beer on the beach and hockey
ticket questionnaires, and the data on sports pricing. The role of fairness is obviously
quite important in determining referenceprices. A large-scaletelephone survey undertaken
by Daniel Kahneman, Jack Knetch and myself is under way and we hope it will provide
additional evidence on two important issues in this area. First, what are the determinants
of people's perceptions of fairness? Second, how are market prices influenced by these
perceptions? Evidence on the former comes directly from the survery research, while
evidence on the latter must come from aggregateeconomic data. The latter evidence is
much more difficult to obtain.
Both the theory and the evidence on the budgetary processes are less well developed
than the other topics presented here. The evidence comes from a small sample of house-
holds that will not support statistical tests. A more systematic study of household decision
making, perhaps utilizing UPC scanner data, should be a high priority.
More generally, the theory presented here represents a hybrid of economics and psy-
chology that has heretofore seen little attention. I feel that marketing is the most logical
field for this combination to be developed. Aside from those topics just mentioned there
are other extensions that seem promising. On the theory side, adding uncertainty and
multiple attributes are obviously worth pursuing. Regarding empirical tests, I would
personally like to see some field experiments which attempt to implement the ideas
suggested here in an actual marketing environment.17
Acknowledgement. An earlierversion of a portion of this paperwas presentedat the Association for Consumer
Research conference in San Francisco, October 1982, and is published in the proceedings of that meeting. The
author wishes to thank Hersh Shefrin, Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky for many useful discussions.
Financial support from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation is gratefully acknowledged.
17This paper was received June 1983 and has been with the author for 2 revisions.
References
Arkes, Hal R. and Catherine Blumer (1985), "The Psychology of Sunk Cost," Organizational Behavior and
Human Decision Processes, 35, 1, 124-140.
Becker, Gary S. (1965), "A Theory of the Allocation of Time," Economic Journal, 75 (September).
Gregory, Robin (1982), "Valuing Non-Market Goods: An Analysis of Alternative Approaches," unpublished
dissertation, University of British Columbia.
Johnson, Eric and Richard Thaler (1985), "Hedonic Framing and the Break-Even Effect," Cornell University,
Working Paper.
Kahneman, Daniel and Amos Tversky (1979), "Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision Under Risk," Econ-
ometrica, 47 (March), 263-291.
Knetch, Jack L. and J. A. Sinden (1984), "Willingness to Pay and Compensation Demanded: Experimental
Evidence of an Unexpected Disparity in Measures of Value," QuarterlyJournal of Economics, 99.
Lancaster, Kelvin J. (1971), Consumer Demand, A New Approach, New York: Columbia University Press.
Thaler, Richard (1980), "Toward a Positive Theory of Consumer Choice," Journal of Economic Behavior and
Organization, 1 (March), 39-60.
and H. M. Shefrin (1981), "An Economic Theory of Self-Control," Journal of Political Economy, 39
(April), 392-406.
Tversky, Amos and Daniel Kahneman (1981), "The Framing of Decisions and the Rationality of Choice,"
Science, 211 453-458.