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NotesEconomicsTopic 2.4Behavioural economics and biases
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2.4.22 min read

Behavioural economics and biases

IB Economics • Unit 2

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Contents

  • What is behavioural economics?
  • Key cognitive biases
  • Rules of thumb and heuristics

🔬 Behavioural Economics

Definition: Behavioural economics studies how real humans actually make decisions, rather than how the rational model assumes they do.

Bounded rationality

Herbert Simon argued that people are boundedly rational — they TRY to be rational but face limits: limited information, limited time, and limited brainpower. Instead of finding the BEST option, they settle for one that is 'good enough'. This is called satisficing.

Think of choosing a restaurant. You do not check every restaurant in the city and rank them — you pick one that seems good enough. That is satisficing.

🧩 Key Biases You Need to Know

Anchoring

People rely too heavily on the first piece of information they receive. A shop that shows a 'was $100, now $60' tag anchors you to $100, making $60 feel like a bargain — even if the product was never really worth $100.


Framing

The way a choice is presented affects the decision. '95% fat-free' sounds much better than 'contains 5% fat' — same information, different reaction. Framing violates the rational model because a rational agent would treat both the same.


More important biases

  • Status quo bias — people stick with defaults (e.g. staying on an expensive phone plan)
  • Loss aversion — the pain of losing $100 feels roughly TWICE as strong as the pleasure of gaining $100
  • Optimism bias — people underestimate risks to themselves ('it won't happen to me')
  • Herding — following what others do instead of thinking independently (stock market bubbles)
For the exam, you need to be able to NAME a bias, EXPLAIN it, and give a REAL-WORLD EXAMPLE. Practice linking biases to consumer or producer decisions.

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📏 Rules of Thumb (Heuristics)

Because full rational analysis is costly and slow, people use heuristics — quick mental shortcuts.

  • 'If the brand is well-known, it must be good' (availability heuristic)
  • 'I always buy this product, so it must still be the best option' (habit)
  • 'Everyone else is buying it, so it must be worth it' (social proof)
  • 'The more expensive option is probably better quality' (price-quality heuristic)
Why this matters for economics: If consumers use heuristics instead of rational calculation, they may not respond to price changes in the way the demand curve predicts. This weakens the predictive power of the basic model.

Related Economics Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

2.1.1The law of demand
2.1.2Determinants of demand
2.1.3Movements vs shifts of demand
2.2.1The law of supply
View all Economics topics

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IB Exam Questions on Behavioural economics and biases

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How Behavioural economics and biases Appears in IB Exams

Examiners use specific command terms when asking about this topic. Here's what to expect:

Define

Give the precise meaning of key terms related to Behavioural economics and biases.

AO1
Describe

Give a detailed account of processes or features in Behavioural economics and biases.

AO2
Explain

Give reasons WHY — cause and effect within Behavioural economics and biases.

AO3
Evaluate

Weigh strengths AND limitations of approaches in Behavioural economics and biases.

AO3
Discuss

Present arguments FOR and AGAINST with a balanced conclusion.

AO3

See the full IB Command Terms guide →

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2.4.1The rational consumer and producer model
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Nudge theory and choice architecture2.4.3

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