New Books Network

Richard H. Thaler and Alex Imas, "The Winner's Curse: Behavioral Economics Anomalies, Then and Now" (Simon and Schuster, 2025)

Nov 15, 2025
Alex Imas, a behavioral economist and AI expert at the University of Chicago, dives into the intriguing anomalies of behavioral economics alongside insights from his book, The Winner's Curse. He explains the winner’s curse through engaging examples like auctions and explores why biases persist in high-stakes settings. Imas discusses innovative classroom experiments designed to teach behavioral concepts and highlights the endowment effect's impact on market behavior. He also shares his current research on how biases affect firms and online marketplaces.
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INSIGHT

Behavioral Economics Versus Rational Axioms

  • Behavioral economics tests whether real human choices match the rational axioms economists use as normative guides.
  • Decades of psychology show many systematic departures from those axioms, motivating behavioral models.
ANECDOTE

Origin Story Of The Winner's Curse Book

  • Richard Thaler wrote quarterly "anomalies" columns for the Journal of Economic Perspectives in the 1980s and compiled them into The Winner's Curse (1992).
  • Alex Imas later collaborated with Thaler to update and expand that book into a 2025 edition.
INSIGHT

How The Winner's Curse Works

  • The winner's curse arises because winners in common-value auctions are those with overly optimistic signals.
  • Winners therefore tend to overpay relative to the item's true value, producing systematic losses.
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