Denuit, Michel
[UCL]
Rey, B.
This paper shows that the notions of prudence, temperance, edginess, and, more generally, risk apportionment of any degree are the consequences of the natural idea that the sensitivity to detrimental changes should decrease with initial wealth. In the setting of Epstein & Tanny (1980), this turns out to be equivalent to the supermodularity of the expected utility for some specific 4-state lotteries.
Bibliographic reference |
Denuit, Michel ; Rey, B.. Prudence, temperance, edginess, and higher degree risk apportionment as decreasing correlation aversion. ISBA Discussion Paper ; 1021 (2010) 18 pages |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/115321 |