Working Paper

Beliefs as a Means of Self-Control? Evidence from a Dynamic Student Survey

Felix Bönisch, Tobias König, Sebastian Schweighofer-Kodritsch, Georg Weizsäcker
CESifo, Munich, 2024

CESifo Working Paper No. 10984

We repeatedly elicit beliefs about the returns to study effort, in a large university course. A behavioral model of quasi-hyperbolic discounting and malleable beliefs predicts that the dynamics of beliefs mirrors the importance of exerting self-control, such that believed returns increase as the exam approaches, and drop post-exam. Exploiting variation in exam timing to control for common information shocks, we find this prediction confirmed: average believed study returns increase by about 20% over the period before the exam, and drop by about the same afterwards. Additional analyses further support the hypothesized mechanism that beliefs serve as a means of self-control.

CESifo Category
Empirical and Theoretical Methods
Behavioural Economics
Keywords: beliefs, present bias, self-control, effort, survey
JEL Classification: C810, D810, D910