When being wasteful appears better than feeling wasteful

Journal Title: Judgment and Decision Making - Year 2010, Vol 5, Issue 7

Abstract

“Waste not want not” expresses our culture’s aversion to waste. “I could have gotten the same thing for less” is a sentiment that can diminish pleasure in a transaction. We study people’s willingness to “pay” to avoid this spoiler. In one scenario, participants imagined they were looking for a rental apartment, and had bought a subscription to an apartment listing. If a cheaper subscription had been declined, respondents preferred not to discover post hoc that it would have sufficed. Specifically, they preferred ending their quest for the ideal apartment after seeing more, rather than fewer, apartments, so that the length of the search exceeds that available within the cheaper subscription. Other scenarios produced similar results. We conclude that people may sometimes prefer to be wasteful in order to avoid feeling wasteful.

Authors and Affiliations

Ro'i Zultan, Maya Bar-Hillel and Nitsan Guy

Keywords

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  • EP ID EP677768
  • DOI -
  • Views 160
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How To Cite

Ro'i Zultan, Maya Bar-Hillel and Nitsan Guy (2010). When being wasteful appears better than feeling wasteful. Judgment and Decision Making, 5(7), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-677768