Background
Endogenous preferences refer to individual preferences that evolve under the influence of the surrounding economic, social, legal, and cultural environment. Unlike exogenous preferences, which are assumed to be constant and independent of the economic context, endogenous preferences recognize the dynamic interplay between the environment and individual choices.
Historical Context
The concept of endogenous preferences began to gain traction in the latter half of the 20th century, challenging the neoclassical economics assumption that preferences are fixed. Economists and sociologists started to recognize that preferences could be shaped by various factors such as advertising, social norms, and legal constraints.
Definitions and Concepts
Endogenous preferences indicate that:
- Preferences are formed and evolve: They respond to economic and social stimuli.
- Influenced by the environment: Policies, cultural norms, marketing strategies, etc., play a significant role.
- Inter-dependent equilibrium: Preferences and the environment mutually determine each other in a dynamic equilibrium.
Major Analytical Frameworks
Classical Economics
Classical economics traditionally assumed static preferences, not accounting for the possibility of preferences changing due to external influences.
Neoclassical Economics
While neoclassical economics primarily maintains fixed preferences to simplify modeling, recent extensions have begun to incorporate preference changes influenced by external factors.
Keynesian Economics
Keynesian economics advanced the idea that economic policy could shape behavioral responses, edging closer to the concept of endogenous preferences, particularly in consumption and investment behavior.
Marxian Economics
Marxian theory postulated that individuals’ preferences and identities are shaped by their socio-economic class and relations to the means of production, implicitly acknowledging the endogenous nature of preferences.
Institutional Economics
Institutional economics strongly supports the idea of endogenous preferences, arguing that preferences evolve from institutional contexts, including laws, social norms, organizations, and historical circumstances.
Behavioral Economics
Behavioral economics explicitly recognizes endogenous preferences, studying how preferences are influenced by psychological, social, cognitive, and emotional factors.
Post-Keynesian Economics
Post-Keynesian economics upholds the view that preferences are not static and can be influenced by various social and institutional factors, reinforcing the notion of endogenous preferences.
Austrian Economics
While Austrian economics emphasizes individual choice and subjectivism, it also acknowledges that preferences can change over time due to the influence of market processes and learning.
Development Economics
Development economists study how changing economic conditions and policies in developing countries can shape the preferences and behaviors of their populations.
Monetarism
Monetarism traditionally assumed fixed preferences but did acknowledge that monetary policy could influence short-term behavioral responses, indirectly alluding to the concept of endogenous preferences.
Comparative Analysis
In comparing different economic schools of thought, endogenous preferences often clash with the traditional assumption of fixed preferences, expanding the analytical framework to consider how preferences change in response to environmental shifts.
Case Studies
Case studies in marketing (e.g., the influence of advertising on consumer choices), public policy (e.g., tax incentives altering investment preferences), and social changes (e.g., shifting consumer behavior due to cultural trends) vividly illustrate the impact of endogenous preferences.
Suggested Books for Further Studies
- “The Theory of the Public Sphere” by Jürgen Habermas
- “Culture and Economics: On Values, Economics and International Business” by Eelke de Jong
- “A Behavioral Theory of Economic Development: Essays on Post-Keynesian Economics” by Dennis C. Mueller
Related Terms with Definitions
- Exogenous Preferences: Preferences that are assumed to be pre-determined and unaffected by the economic environment.
- Behavioral Economics: A field of economics that studies how psychological, social, and emotional factors affect economic decisions.
- Institutional Economics: A branch of economics focusing on the role of institutions in shaping economic behavior.