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This innovative book explores how the design of financial education
programmes could benefit from the findings of behavioural economics
and finance and cognitive sciences. It covers the social, cultural
and technological determinants of financial education, the role of
the banking system in promoting financial literacy, and how
governments and regulatory authorities are dealing with financial
education and risk literacy programmes in schools. Featuring
contributions from authors with diverse methodological and
ideological backgrounds, Financial Education and Risk Literacy
offers a rich and multifaceted debate. Chapters explore theory and
empirical evidence, utilising investigations of programmes deployed
and the outcomes of experiments. This book also complements the
emerging literature by studying how individuals perceive and
process information when making financial decisions. Economics
students and scholars, in particular those studying behavioural
economics, will appreciate the forward-looking agenda of this book.
Its insights into how policymakers can benefit from a behavioural
approach will also help regulators in the financial education
sector.
Following rapid technological advancements that have taken place
throughout the late 20th and early 21st centuries, this intriguing
book provides a dynamic agenda for the study of artificial
intelligence (AI) within finance. Through an in-depth consideration
of the use of AI, it utilises case-study examples to investigate
AI’s effectiveness within investment and banking. Artificial
Intelligence and Financial Behaviour examines to what extent AI can
guide people to improve their financial wellbeing. It explores
potential effects of, and problems with, specific technologies, as
well as describing current regulatory considerations regarding the
use of AI and machine learning. Chapters succinctly portray the
impact AI may have on investor and trader behaviour. This highly
informative book will be beneficial for students and researchers
studying behavioural and regulatory economics. It will also be
immensely useful for financial regulators who are analysing
problems from contemporary points of view.
Financial markets are complex. Regulators strive to predict ways in
which they can malfunction and create rules to prevent this from
happening, yet behavioural impacts are often overlooked. This book
explores how behavioural finance can go hand-in-hand with
traditional methods to help banks and regulators create better
policies. It also demonstrates how the behavioural finance
revolution has opened the way to a more integrated approach to the
analysis of economic phenomena. This book adopts a forward-looking
agenda that takes account of existing practices based on
behavioural science. It focuses on how to make financial markets an
arena for fair play as a central criterion for securing and
enhancing societal well being. It examines how bounded rationality,
heuristic decision making, aversion to losses, endowment effects
and social preferences may impact financial decisions, thus
exposing the flaws in traditional forecasting methods that rely on
an over-simplified representation of the individual. With
contributions from both academics and practitioners, this book will
be fundamental reading for researchers in the finance and
behavioural economics. Regulators who wish to utilise behavioural
policymaking will also find this a beneficial read. Contributors
include: B. Alemanni, C. Attia, M. Bianco, G. Bracchi, E.
Cervellati, C. Cruciani, G. De Felice, M. Egidi, U. Filotto, F.
Franceschi, G. Gardenal, G. Gigerenzer, C. Giorgiantonio, D.
Hilton, N. Linciano, A. Lojschova, D. Masciandaro, B. Mojon, P.
Mottura, S. Mousavi, A. Penalver, L. Portelli, U. Rigoni, S. Rossi,
Z. Rotondi, G. Sillari, A. Varaldo, R. Viale, G. Zevi
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Paperback
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R205
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Discovery Miles 1 680
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