Post by arfankj4 on Mar 7, 2024 7:55:49 GMT 1
To gain ground Progressive introduced Snapshot a usage based pricing product that tracks driving habits and allows some customers to reduce payments by percent. The case Progressive by John Wells and Galen Danskin examines the impact of Snapshot on Progressive s business. —Sean Silverthorne PUBLICATIONS FEBRUARY JOURNAL OF FINANCE The Effect of Providing Peer Information on Retirement Savings Decisions By Beshears John James J.
Choi David Laibson Brigitte C. Madrian and Katherine L. Milkman ABSTRACT—Using a field experiment in a k plan we measure the effect of disseminating information about peer behavior on savings. Low saving employees received simplified plan enrollment or contribution increase forms. A randomized Poland Mobile Number List subset of forms stated the fraction of age matched coworkers participating in the plan or age matched participants contributing at least of pay to the plan. We document an oppositional reaction the presence of peer information decreased the savings of nonparticipants who were ineligible for k automatic enrollment and higher observed peer savings rates also decreased savings. Discouragement from upward social comparisons seems to drive this reaction.
FEBRUARY PERSPECTIVES ON PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE When Does Interpersonal Attraction A Proposed Integrative Model from Erstwhile Adversaries pdf By Finkel Eli J. Michael I. Norton Harry T. Reis Dan Ariely Peter A. Caprariello Paul W. Eastwick Jenna H. Frost and Michael R. Maniaci ABSTRACT—This article began as an adversarial collaboration between two groups of researchers with competing views on a longstanding question Does familiarity promote or undermine interpersonal attraction As we explored our respective positions it became clear that the limitations of our conceptualizations of the familiarity attraction link as well as the limitations of prior research were masking a set of higher order principles capable of integrating these diverse conceptualizations.
Choi David Laibson Brigitte C. Madrian and Katherine L. Milkman ABSTRACT—Using a field experiment in a k plan we measure the effect of disseminating information about peer behavior on savings. Low saving employees received simplified plan enrollment or contribution increase forms. A randomized Poland Mobile Number List subset of forms stated the fraction of age matched coworkers participating in the plan or age matched participants contributing at least of pay to the plan. We document an oppositional reaction the presence of peer information decreased the savings of nonparticipants who were ineligible for k automatic enrollment and higher observed peer savings rates also decreased savings. Discouragement from upward social comparisons seems to drive this reaction.
FEBRUARY PERSPECTIVES ON PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE When Does Interpersonal Attraction A Proposed Integrative Model from Erstwhile Adversaries pdf By Finkel Eli J. Michael I. Norton Harry T. Reis Dan Ariely Peter A. Caprariello Paul W. Eastwick Jenna H. Frost and Michael R. Maniaci ABSTRACT—This article began as an adversarial collaboration between two groups of researchers with competing views on a longstanding question Does familiarity promote or undermine interpersonal attraction As we explored our respective positions it became clear that the limitations of our conceptualizations of the familiarity attraction link as well as the limitations of prior research were masking a set of higher order principles capable of integrating these diverse conceptualizations.