The Tim Ferriss Show

#830: Nick Kokonas and Richard Thaler, Nobel Prize Laureate — Realistic Economics, Avoiding The Winner’s Curse, Using Temptation Bundling, and Going Against the Establishment

1327 snips
Oct 10, 2025
Richard H. Thaler, a Nobel Prize-winning behavioral economist, joins Nick Kokonas, entrepreneur and co-founder of Tock. They explore the flaws in traditional economic assumptions and how behavioral insights can reshape decision-making. Thaler discusses loss aversion's impact on markets and why people bid irrationally in auctions. They delve into practical applications of nudges, like using deposits to reduce restaurant no-shows. The duo also shares insights on mental accounting and the ethical implications of behavioral strategies.
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Economics Models Use 'Max' For Simplicity

  • Economists model people as maximizers (MAX) because it's the simplest, most precise assumption for formal math.
  • That assumption often misrepresents real human behavior, which uses shortcuts and satisficing.
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Rationality, Selfishness, Self-Control Are Assumptions

  • Classical models also assume selfishness and perfect self-control, leaving out fairness and self-control failures.
  • Omitting these leads to systematic prediction errors in real markets and decisions.
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Cashews, Dinner Parties, And Choice Reduction

  • Thaler hid a bowl of cashews at a party to protect guests from overeating and they thanked him.
  • Economists argued more options are always better, but people sometimes prefer fewer options.
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