HOME | REACH US  
 



.com .net .org .info .mobi
.biz .us .co.uk .in
.eu .ws .bz .cc .tv Etc.
Domain Names

Website Development
Web Hosting
Email Hosting
Digital Certificate
Etc.

@ Best Prices From

www.DomainsUAE.com
Rational choice theory
   
Google
 
Web libraryoflibrary.com
Economics

Outline of topics
General classifications

History of economic thought
Microeconomics · Macroeconomics

Methodologies

Behavioral · Computational
Econometrics · Evolutionary
Experimental · Game theory
Mathematical · Heterodox

Fields and subfields

Growth · Development · History
International · Economic systems
Monetary and Financial
Public and Welfare economics
Health · Labour · Managerial
Industrial organization  · Law
Agricultural · Natural resource
Environmental · Ecological
Urban · Regional · Cultural

Lists

Journals · Publications
Categories · Topics · Economists

Business and Economics Portal
This box: view  talk  edit


Rational choice theory, also known as rational action theory, is a framework for understanding and often formally modeling social and economic behavior. It is the dominant theoretical paradigm in microeconomics. It is also central to modern political science and is used by scholars in other disciplines such as sociology and philosophy.

The 'rationality' described by rational choice theory is different from the colloquial and most philosophical uses of rationality. Although models of rational choice are diverse, all assume individuals choose the best action according to stable preference functions and constraints facing them. Most models have additional assumptions. Proponents of rational choice models do not claim that a model's assumptions are a full description of reality, only that good models can aid reasoning and provide help in formulating falsifiable hypotheses, whether intuitive or not. Successful hypotheses are those that survive empirical tests.

Rational choice theory is a successor of much older descriptions of rational behavior.[citation needed] It is widely used as an assumption of the behavior of individuals in microeconomic models and analysis. Although rationality cannot be directly empirically tested, empirical tests can be conducted on some of the results derived from the models. Over the last decades rational choice theory has also become increasingly employed in social sciences other than economics, such as sociology and political science.[1] It has had far-reaching impacts on the study of political science, especially in fields like the study of interest groups, elections, behaviour in legislatures, coalitions, and bureaucracy.[2]

Models that rely on rational choice theory often adopt methodological individualism, the assumption that social situations or collective behaviors are the result of individual actions. The poor fit between this and sociological conceptions of social situations partially explains the theory's limited use in sociology.

Contents

Actions, assumptions, and individual preferences

The basic idea of rational choice theory is that patterns of behavior in societies reflect the choices made by individuals as they try to maximize their benefits and minimize their costs. In other words, people make decisions about how they should act by comparing the costs and benefits of different courses of action. As a result, patterns of behavior will develop within the society that result from those choices.

The idea of rational choice, where people compare the costs and benefits of certain actions, is easy to see in economic theory. Since people want to get the most useful products at the lowest price, they will judge the benefits of a certain object (for example, how useful is it or how attractive is it) compared to similar objects. Then they will compare prices (or costs). In general, people will choose the object that provides the greatest reward at the lowest cost.

The Utilitarianism series,
part of the Politics series
Portal:Politics

Rational decision making entails choosing an action given one's preferences, the actions one could take, and expectations about the outcomes of those actions. Actions are often expressed as a set, for example a set of j exhaustive and exclusive actions:

A = \{a_1, \ldots, a_i,  \ldots, a_j\}

For example, if a person is to vote for either Roger or Sara or to abstain, their set of possible voting actions is:

A = {Roger,Sara,abstain}

Individuals can also have similar sets of possible outcomes.

Rational choice theory makes two assumptions about individuals' preferences for actions:

  • Completeness – all actions can be ranked in an order of preference (indifference between two or more is possible).
  • Transitivity – if action a1 is preferred to a2, and action a2 is preferred to a3, then a1 is preferred to a3.

Together these assumptions form the result that given a set of exhaustive and exclusive actions to choose from, an individual can rank them in terms of his preferences, and that his preferences are consistent.

An individual's preferences can also take forms:

  • Strict preference occurs when an individual prefers a1 to a2, but not a2 to a1.
  • In some models, a weak preference can be held in which an individual has a preference for at least aj, similar to the mathematical operator =.
  • Indifference occurs when an individual does not prefer a1 to a2, or a2 to a1.

In more complex models, other assumptions are often incorporated, such as the assumption of independence axiom. Also, with dynamic models that include decision-making over time, time inconsistency may affect an individual's preferences.

Other assumptions

Often, to simplify calculation and facilitate testing, some possibly unrealistic assumptions are made about the world. These can include:

  • An individual has full or perfect information about exactly what will occur under any choice made. More complex models rely on probability to describe outcomes.
  • An individual has the cognitive ability and time to weigh every choice against every other choice. Studies in to the limitations of this assumption are included in theories of bounded rationality.

Utility maximization

Often preferences are described by their utility function or payoff function. This is an ordinal number an individual assigns over the available actions, such as:

u\left(a_i\right) > u\left(a_j\right)

The individual's preferences are then expressed as the relation between these ordinal assignments. For example, if an individual prefers the candidate Sara over Roger over abstaining, their preferences would have the relation:

u\left(sara\right) > u\left(roger\right) > u\left(abstain\right)

Criticism

Both the assumptions and the behavioral predictions of rational choice theory have sparked criticism from various camps. Some people have developed models of bounded rationality, which hope to be more psychologically plausible without completely abandoning the idea that reason underlies decision-making processes. For a long time, a popular strain of critique was a lack of empirical basis, but experimental economics and experimental game theory have largely changed that critique (although they have added other critiques, mainly by demonstrating some human behavior that consistently deviates from rational choice theory, see cognitive bias).[citation needed]

In their 1994 piece, Pathologies of Rational Choice Theory, Green and Shapiro argue that the empirical outputs of rational choice theory have been limited. They contend that much of the applicable literature, at least in Political Science, was done with weak methods and that when corrected many of the empirical outcomes no longer hold. When taken in this perspective, Rational Choice Theory has provided very little to the overall understanding of political interaction - and is an amount certainly disproportionately weak relative to its appearance in the literature (Green and Shapiro, 1994).

Schram and Caterino (2006) contains a fundamental methodological criticism of rational choice theory for promoting the view that the natural science model is the only appropriate methodology in social science and that political science should follow this model, with its emphasis on quantification and mathematization. Schram and Caterino argue instead for methodological pluralism.

Benefits

Describing the decisions made by individuals as rational and utility maximizing may seem to be a tautological explanation of their behavior that provided very little new information. While there may be many reasons for a rational choice theory approach, two are important for the social sciences. First, assuming humans make decisions in a rational, rather than stochastic manner implies that their behavior can be modeled and thus predictions can be made about future actions. Second, the mathematical formality of rational choice theory models allows social scientists to derive results from their models that may have otherwise not been seen.

Cultural and political influence

A history of the RAND Corporation cites rational choice theory as the "Matrix code of the West," since RAND scientists and policy researchers such as Kenneth J. Arrow used it as a foundation for many influential studies, some top-secret, that were conducted throughout various presidential administrations, beginning with Kennedy [3]. Believing that rational choice theory offered a philosophical weapon for the defeat of Communism, RAND conducted studies in how to utilize the theory to derive tax structures, to educate children and to privatize many previously publicly funded entities such as health service access for the greatest effectiveness. Peaking in the "Reagan Revolution," rational choice theory, later disseminated through RAND affiliates such as Richard Perle, Paul Wolfowitz, Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, and Condoleezza Rice, provided the justification for increased defense spending[citation needed] and privatization of many previously federal endeavors[citation needed].

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ Scott, John. "Rational Choice Theory". Retrieved on 2008-07-30.
  2. ^ Dunleavy, Patrick (1991). Democracy, Bureaucracy and Public Choice: Economic Models in Political Science. London: Pearson. 
  3. ^ Abella 2008, p. 5

References

External links



Index Of Related Pages




All pages | Previous page (Rath City, Texas) | Next page (Ratnik)

Rational choice theoryRational choice theory (criminology)Rational conformal field theory
Rational consequence relation
Rational dependence
Rational economic exchange
Rational egoism
Rational expectations
Rational fideism
Rational function
Rational homotopy theory
Rational ignorance
Rational language
Rational love
Rational mappingRational motion
Rational mysticismRational normal curve
Rational number
Rational planning model
Rational point
Rational pricingRational reconstructionRational representation
Rational root theorem
Rational selfishnessRational sieve
Rational singularity
Rational surface
Rational temperament
Rational trigonometryRational variety
Rational zeta seriesRationale
Rationale for gifted programsRationale for the Iraq War
Rationale for the War on Terrorism
Rationale of the Dirty Joke
Rationalis
Rationalisation (mathematics)
Rationalism
Rationalism (architecture)Rationalism (disambiguation)
Rationalist AssociationRationalist Association of IndiaRationalist International
Rationalist Society of Australia
Rationalist movement
Rationality
Rationality and power
Rationality theoremRationalizability
RationalizationRationalization (economics)
Rationalization (psychology)Rationalization (sociology)
Rationals (band)Ratione soli
RationibusRationing
Rationing (1944 film)Rationing and Supply Minister of Israel
Rationing in CubaRationing in Nicaragua
Rationing in the Soviet UnionRationing in the United Kingdom
RatiopharmRatiopharm Ulm
Ratirahasya
Ratiratna Pradipika
Ratite
Ratičres
RatkaRatkaj
Ratking (novel)
Ratko DautovskiRatko Delorko
Ratko DostanicRatko Kacian
Ratko MladicRatko Ninkovic
Ratko Peric
Ratko StevovicRatko SvilarRatko Varda
Ratko Vujovic
Ratko Colic
Ratko ĐokicRatkovce
RatkovoRatkovo, Slovakia
Ratkovo (Odžaci)
Ratkovská LehotaRatkovská Suchá
Ratkovské BystréRatkováRatkuria
RatlamRatlam District
Ratlam Railway Colony
Ratleaf ForestRatley
RatliffRatliff Boon
Ratliff City, Oklahoma
Ratliff StadiumRatlike hamster
Ratline
RatlinesRatlines (history)
RatlinghopeRatloop
Ratma
Ratmalana AirportRatman's Notebooks
RatmataRatmate
Ratmir KholmovRatnaRatna, Queen Mother of Nepal
Ratna-gotra-vibhaga
Ratna FabriRatna Pathak
Ratna Rajya Laxmi Campus
Ratna SinghRatnachura
Ratnadeep AdivrekarRatnadhvaja
RatnagiriRatnagiri (Lok Sabha constituency)
Ratnagiri (Orissa)
Ratnagiri Hindu Sabha
Ratnagiri districtRatnajeevan Hoole
Ratnakar Hari KelkarRatnakar MatkariRatnakaravarni
Ratnam Sports ClubRatnanagarRatnangi
RatnapurRatnapur, GandakiRatnapur, Seti
RatnapuraRatnapura DistrictRatnapuri
Ratnapuri, IndiaRatnapuri, NepalRatnasambhava
Ratnasiri WickremanayakeRatnavaliRatnavarma Heggade
RatnawatiRatnawica, Sanok County
Ratne Igre
RatnechaurRatner'sRatner's Star
Ratner's theorems
Ratnici - Warriors

Previous page (Rath City, Texas) | Next page (Ratnik)



BUILD YOUR WEB SITE WITH www.DomainsUAE.com