Tracking Costs of Time and Money: How Accounting Periods Affect Mental Accounting

After people incur costs to get future benefits, they usually track these costs in their mental accounts and are keen to receive the benefits when they become available. We introduce the notion that costs and benefits can occur either in the same accounting period (day, season, etc.) or in different periods. Our key argument is that monetary costs are tracked across accounting periods but that temporal costs are written off at the end of the period in which they are incurred. Thus, accounting periods lead to a time-money asymmetry in the tracking of costs and, consequently, in the likelihood of seeking benefits. In a laboratory study, an online-panel study, and a field study with movie-theater patrons, we demonstrate how this relationship among accounting periods, cost tracking, and benefit seeking is different for time than for money. Our findings offer insights into the sunk-cost effect, time-money differences, and mental accounting. (c) 2010 by JOURNAL OF CONSUMER RESEARCH, Inc..

[1]  J. Aaker,et al.  The Happiness of Giving: The Time-Ask Effect , 2008 .

[2]  Stephen J. Hoch,et al.  Spending Time versus Spending Money , 2004 .

[3]  H. Arkes,et al.  The Psychology of Sunk Cost , 1985 .

[4]  C. Judd,et al.  When moderation is mediated and mediation is moderated. , 2005, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[5]  R. Thaler,et al.  Labor Supply of New York City Cabdrivers: One Day at a Time , 1997 .

[6]  Jong-Youn Rha,et al.  The mental accounting of time , 2009 .

[7]  Ritesh Saini,et al.  Currency of Search: How Spending Time on Search is not the Same as Spending Money , 2008 .

[8]  Preferences Scientific Kahneman, Daniel, and Amos Tversky. , 1982 .

[9]  R. Thaler Toward a positive theory of consumer choice , 1980 .

[10]  Jacob Hornik,et al.  The Use of Time: An Integrated Conceptual Model , 1981 .

[11]  Jonathan Levav,et al.  Emotional Accounting: How Feelings about Money Influence Consumer Choice , 2009 .

[12]  R. Thaler,et al.  An Economic Theory of Self-Control , 1977, Journal of Political Economy.

[13]  D. Soman The mental accounting of sunk time costs: Why time is not like money. , 2001 .

[14]  Robert J. Graham,et al.  The role of perception of time in consumer research. , 1981 .

[15]  Ronald J. Faber,et al.  Spent Resources: Self‐Regulatory Resource Availability Affects Impulse Buying , 2007 .

[16]  A. Tversky,et al.  Prospect theory: an analysis of decision under risk — Source link , 2007 .

[17]  A. Tversky,et al.  Prospect theory: analysis of decision under risk , 1979 .

[18]  Manoj Thomas,et al.  Will I Spend More in 12 Months or a Year? The Effect of Ease of Estimation and Confidence on Budget Estimates , 2008 .

[19]  S. Jenkins,et al.  How Much Income Mobility Is There in Britain , 1998 .

[20]  G. W. Fischer,et al.  Preferences for separating or combining events. , 1991, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[21]  Daniel Read,et al.  Choice Bracketing , 1999 .

[22]  D. A. Kenny,et al.  The moderator-mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations. , 1986, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[23]  Richard H. Thaler,et al.  Mental Accounting and Consumer Choice , 1985, Mark. Sci..

[24]  John T. Gourville,et al.  Transaction Decoupling: How Price Bundling Affects the Decision to Consume , 2001 .

[25]  Drazen Prelec,et al.  The Red and the Black: Mental Accounting of Savings and Debt , 1998 .

[26]  David Laibson,et al.  Commentary on “Choice Bracketing” by Read, Loewenstein and Rabin , 1999 .

[27]  Bernd H. Schmitt,et al.  Waiting time and decision making: is time like money? , 1995 .

[28]  Amar Cheema,et al.  Malleable Mental Accounting: The Effect of Flexibility on the Justification of Attractive Spending and Consumption Decisions , 2006 .

[29]  R. Thaler Mental accounting matters , 1999 .

[30]  J. Aaker,et al.  'The Time vs. Money Effect': Shifting Product Attitudes and Decisions through Personal Connection , 2008 .

[31]  John G. Lynch,et al.  Resource Slack and Propensity to Discount Delayed Investments of Time Versus Money , 2004, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[32]  Vanessa M. Patrick,et al.  Psychological Distancing: Why Happiness Helps You See the Big Picture , 2009 .

[33]  The Sunk-Time Effect: An Exploration. , 2009, Journal of behavioral decision making.

[34]  C. Areni Salvation of the Second Shift: Are Wives Immune to Monday Blues? , 2009 .

[35]  John T. Gourville,et al.  Payment Depreciation: The Behavioral Effects of Temporally Separating Payments from Consumption , 1998 .

[36]  Ashwani Monga,et al.  How I Decide Depends on What I Spend: Use of Heuristics is Greater for Time than for Money , 2007 .

[37]  Jack B. Soll,et al.  Mental Budgeting and Consumer Decisions , 1996 .

[38]  Richard J. Zeckhauser,et al.  Reference Incomes, Loss Aversion, and Physician Behavior , 2003, Review of Economics and Statistics.

[39]  R. Baumeister Yielding to Temptation: Self‐Control Failure, Impulsive Purchasing, and Consumer Behavior , 2002 .