Robert Sugden, FBA (born 26 August 1949) is an English author in the area of cognitive and behavioural economics. Professor Sugden's research combines game theory (mainly experimental game theory and coordination games) with moral and political philosophy. He is associated with the classical-liberal tradition of Hume, Mill, and Hayek.
Robert Sugden | |
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Born | 26 August 1949 |
Nationality | British |
Academic career | |
Field | Microeconomics |
Institution | University of East Anglia, Norwich |
School or tradition | Cognitive & Behavioural Economics |
Alma mater | University of York, UK |
Influences | Harsanyi, Rawls, Smith, Hume, Mill, and Hayek |
Contributions | welfare economics, social choice, decision theory, evolutionary social theory, regret theory |
Information at IDEAS / RePEc |
Theory
editIn his most cited work, Sugden explored how conventions of property, mutual aid, and voluntary supply of public goods can evolve spontaneously out of the interactions of self-interested individuals and can become moral norms.[1]
Sugden investigated a number of violations of the von Neumann and Morgenstern's expected utility axioms, and developed regret theory as an alternative with Graham Loomes. In support of this work, he developed a number of experimental methods to test theories of decision under risk.[2]
His work also deals with economic methods, in which he argues that economic models are not abstractions from, or simplifications of, the real world, but rather descriptions of imaginary worlds whose validity can only be inferred by how reasonable their predictions are.[3]
In The Community of Advantage, Sugden develops a contractarian approach to welfare economics that is based on opportunity sets and not individual preferences.[4] The shift from preferences to opportunity is partly motivated by recent experimental work indicating that individuals lack well-defined preferences. In 2019, The Community of Advantage was awarded the Joseph B. Gittler Award for outstanding contribution in the field of the philosophy of the social sciences.[5]
Awards and fellowships
edit- Leverhulme Personal Research Professorship, Leverhulme Trust, February 1998 – January 2003
Selected papers
edit- G Loomes and R Sugden, Regret theory: An alternative theory of rational choice under uncertainty (1982), The Economic Journal
- R Sugden, Spontaneous order (1989), The Journal of Economic Perspectives
- R Sugden, Reciprocity: the supply of public goods through voluntary contributions (1984), The Economic Journal
- R Sugden, A theory of focal points (1995), The Economic Journal
- R Sugden, Credible worlds: the status of theoretical models in economics (2000), Journal of Economic Methodology
Selected books
edit- R Sugden and AH Williams, The principles of practical cost-benefit analysis (1978)
- R Sugden, The economics of rights, co-operation, and welfare (1986)
- R Sugden, The community of advantage: A behavioural economist's defense of the market (2018)
References
edit- ^ R Sugden, The economics of rights, co-operation, and welfare (1986)
- ^ G Loomes and R Sugden, Regret theory: An alternative theory of rational choice under uncertainty (1982), The Economic Journal
- ^ R Sugden, Credible worlds: the status of theoretical models in economics (2000), Journal of Economic Methodology
- ^ R Sugden, The community of advantage: A behavioural economist's defense of the market (2018)
- ^ "Joseph B. Gittler Award - The American Philosophical Association". www.apaonline.org. Retrieved 19 October 2020.