Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Why do so many otherwise rational individuals make irrational decisions when it comes to money? Financial journalist Gary Belsky and Cornell University psychology professor Thomas Gilovich contend the answers can be found--and the deficiencies remedied--with help from a relatively new science called behavioral economics. Still largely unknown outside academic circles, the field can be traced to research on the impact of rewards and punishments on human judgment and decision- making that first were undertaken at Jerusalem's Hebrew University some 30 years ago. In Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes , Belsky and Gilovich update this pioneering work and show readers how to understand exactly why they invest, spend, and save as they do. More importantly, using examples that everyone can identify with and language that anyone can understand, the authors offer dozens of workable suggestions that can help readers manage their money better. "We believe that by identifying the psychological causes behind many types of financial decisions," they write, "you can effectively change your behavior in ways that will ultimately put more money in your pocket and help you keep more of what you already have." --Howard Rothman
Review
David Dreman Chairman, Dreman Value Management, and author of Contrarian Investment Strategies A lucid introduction to the field of behavioral finance for anyone interested in the critical and yet almost entirely concealed role of psychology in making investment decisions.
Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes--and How to Correct Them: Lessons from the New Science of Behavioral Economics
Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes--and How to Correct Them: Lessons from the New Science of Behavioral Economics,Gary Belsky,Thomas Gilovich,Simon & Schuster,0684844931,Accounting - General,Business & Economics,Business / Economics / Finance,Business/Economics,Consumer Finance,Consumers,Decision making,Economics - General,Finance, Personal,Investments,Personal Finance - Budgeting,Personal Finance - General,Personal Finance - Money Management,Psychological aspects,Business & Economics / Personal Finance / General
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