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Value of a Clear Desk: Sequencing Decisions when Decision Capacity is Limited

Author

Listed:
  • Anthony Heyes

    (University of Ottawa and University of Sussex)

  • Sandeep Kapur

    (Birkbeck, University of London)

Abstract

Postponing a decision may allow a better decision later. However, depending on what else comes up, there may never be a moment when it makes sense to come back to a postponed decision, leaving potential gains unrealized. We develop a model of an agent with limited decision-making capacity who faces a sequence of decisions that vary stochastically in their importance and improvability. In each period he can either act on the newly-arrived opportunity or return to one carried from earlier. The prospect of future congestion in decisions generates an incentive to make prompt decisions, to "keep a clear desk". The strength of that imperative is: (1) increasing in the expected importance of future opportunities but decreasing in the dispersion of their importance; (2) decreasing in the expected improvability of future opportunities, but ambiguously influenced by the dispersion of that improvability. The analysis illuminates some decision practices that would otherwise be hard to rationalize. Multiple equilibria in some cases rationalize persistently different behaviour by two agents facing (almost) identical sequences of choices. The setting allows for a generalization of the concept of option value to congested decision environments and, by accounting for a plausible cost to postponement of action, offers a counter-force to the precautionary principle.

Suggested Citation

  • Anthony Heyes & Sandeep Kapur, 2018. "Value of a Clear Desk: Sequencing Decisions when Decision Capacity is Limited," Birkbeck Working Papers in Economics and Finance 1813, Birkbeck, Department of Economics, Mathematics & Statistics.
  • Handle: RePEc:bbk:bbkefp:1813
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    File URL: https://eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/25403
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
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    4. Heyes, Anthony & Lyon, Thomas P. & Martin, Steve, 2018. "Salience games: Private politics when public attention is limited," Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, Elsevier, vol. 88(C), pages 396-410.
    5. -, 1986. "Agenda = Agenda," Series Históricas 8749, Naciones Unidas Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe (CEPAL).
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    More about this item

    Keywords

    Dynamic decision-making; limited attention; organizational bandwidth; committees; precautionary principle; option value.;
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