Tyingodysseus Qje
Tyingodysseus Qje
Tyingodysseus Qje
NAVA ASHRAF
DEAN KARLAN
WESLEY YIN
I. INTRODUCTION
Although much has been written, little has been resolved
concerning the representation of preferences for consumption
over time. Beginning with Strotz [1955] and Phelps and Pollak
[1968], models have been put forth that predict individuals will
exhibit more impatience for near-term trade-offs than for future
trade-offs. These models often incorporate hyperbolic or quasi-
* We thank Chona Echavez for collaborating on the field work, the Green
Bank of Caraga for cooperation throughout this experiment, John Owens and the
USAID/Philippines Microenterprise Access to Banking Services Program team for
helping to get the project started, Nathalie Gons, Tomoko Harigaya, Karen Lyons
and Lauren Smith for excellent research and field assistance, and three anony-
mous referees and the editors. We thank seminar participants at Stanford Uni-
versity, University of CaliforniaBerkeley, Cornell University, Williams College,
Princeton University, Yale University, BREAD, University of WisconsinMadi-
son, Harvard University, Social Science Research Council, London School of
Economics, Northwestern University, Columbia University, Oxford University,
Association of Public Policy and Management annual conference, and the CEEL
Workshop on Dynamic Choice and Experimental Economics, and many advisors,
colleagues and mentors for valuable comments throughout this project. We thank
the National Science Foundation (SGER SES-0313877), Russell Sage Foundation,
and the Social Science Research Council for funding. We thank Sununtar Set-
boonsarng, Vo Van Cuong, and Xianbin Yao at the Asian Development Bank and
the PCFC for providing funding for related work. All views, opinions, and errors
are our own.
2006 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.
The Quarterly Journal of Economics, May 2006
635
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3. ITT represents the average savings increase from being offered the com-
mitment product. Four hundred and eleven pesos is approximately equivalent to
U.S. $8, 2.7 percent of average monthly household income from our baseline
survey, and 0.8 percent of GDP per capita in 2004.
4. See Fudenberg and Levine [2005] for a more general dual-self model of
self-control which makes similar predictions as the hyperbolic models.
5. The discount rate between two particular time periods t and period t 1
is different than the rate of discount between t 1 and t 2, but is the same
conditional on whether period t or t 1 is the current time period.
6. This plan offered individuals in the United States an option to commit
(albeit a nonbinding commitment) to allocate a portion of future wage increases
638 QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS
toward their retirement savings plan. When the future wage increase occurs,
these individuals typically leave their commitment intact and start saving more:
savings increased from 3.5 percent of income to 13.6 percent over 40 months for
those in the plan. Individuals who do not participate in SMarT do not save more
(or as much more) when their wage increases occur.
7. In the United States, Christmas Clubs were popular in the early twentieth
century because they committed individuals to a schedule of deposits and limited
withdrawals. In more recent years, defined contribution plans, housing mort-
gages, and withholding too much tax now play this role for many people in
developed economies [Laibson 1997]. In developing countries, many individuals
use informal mechanisms such as rotating savings and credit organizations
(ROSCAs) in order to commit themselves to savings [Gugerty 2001].
TYING ODYSSEUS TO THE MAST 639
8. Exceptions are allowed for medical emergency, in which case a hospital bill
is required, for death in the family, requiring a death certificate, or relocating
outside the banks geographic area, requiring documentation from the area gov-
ernment official. The clients who signed up for the SEED product signed a
contract with the bank agreeing to these strict requirements. After six months of
the project, no instances occurred of someone exercising these options. For the
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TABLE I
CLIENTS SPECIFIC SAVINGS GOALS
Frequency Percent
Christmas/birthday/celebration/graduation 95 47.0%
Education 41 20.3%
House/lot construction and purchase 20 9.9%
Capital for business 20 9.9%
Purchase or maintenance of machine/automobile/appliance 8 4.0%
Did not report reason for saving 6 3.0%
Agricultural financing/investing/maintenance 4 2.0%
Vacation/travel 4 2.0%
Personal needs/future expenses 3 1.5%
Medical 1 0.5%
Total 202 100.0%
amount-based goals, the money remains in the account until either the goal is
reached or the funds withdrawn or the funds are requested under an emergency.
9. However, it should be noted that the amount-based commitment is not
fool-proof. For instance, in the amount-based account, someone could borrow the
remaining amount for five minutes from a friend or even a moneylender in order
to receive the current balance in the account. No evidence suggests that this
occurred.
TYING ODYSSEUS TO THE MAST 641
10. Fiestas are large local celebrations that happen at different dates during
the year for each barangay (smallest political unit and defined community, on
average containing 1000 individuals) in this region. Families are expected to host
large parties, with substantial food, when it is their barangays fiesta date.
Families often pay for this annual party through loans from local high-interest-
rate moneylenders.
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11. Appendix 1 shows that the survey response rate did not vary significantly
across treatment groups (Panel B), and that the outcome of interest, change in
savings balances, did not vary across treatment groups for the nonsurveyed
individuals. If participants were not surveyed, they were offered neither the
SEED product nor the marketing treatment.
TYING ODYSSEUS TO THE MAST 643
TABLE II
SUMMARY STATISTICS OF VARIABLES, BY TREATMENT ASSIGNMENT
MEANS AND STANDARD ERRORS
F-stat
Control Marketing Treatment P-value
A. VARIABLES AVAILABLE AT
TIME OF RANDOMIZATION
Client savings balance (hundreds) 5.307 4.990 5.027 0.554
(0.233) (0.234) (0.174)
Active account 0.360 0.363 0.349 0.861
(0.022) (0.022) (0.017)
Barangays distance to branch 21.866 23.230 22.709 0.542
(0.842) (0.887) (0.672)
Banks penetration in barangay 0.022 0.022 0.022 0.824
(0.000) (0.000) (0.000)
Standard deviation of balances in
barangay (hundreds) 4.871 4.913 4.880 0.647
(0.350) (0.335) (0.244)
Mean savings balance in barangay
(hundreds) 4.733 4.770 4.476 0.757
(0.374) (0.371) (0.260)
Population of barangay (thousands) 5.854 5.708 5.730 0.858
(0.213) (0.203) (0.153)
B. VARIABLES FROM SURVEY
INSTRUMENT
Education 18.194 17.918 18.222 0.200
(0.137) (0.145) (0.105)
Female 0.616 0.547 0.600 0.078
(0.022) (0.023) (0.017)
Age 42.051 42.871 42.108 0.556
(0.594) (0.658) (0.458)
Impatient (now versus one month) 0.808 0.890 0.869 0.309
(0.040) (0.040) (0.030)
Hyperbolic 0.262 0.275 0.278 0.816
(0.020) (0.021) (0.015)
Sample size 469 466 842 1777
Standard errors are listed in parentheses below the means. The sequence of events for the experiment
were as follows: Step 1: Randomly assigned individuals to Treatment, Marketing, and Control groups. Step
2: Household survey conducted on each individual in the sample frame of existing Green Bank clients
(random assignment not released to survey team, hence steps 1 and 2 effectively were done simultaneously).
Step 3: Individuals reached by the survey team and in the Treatment group were approached via a
door-to-door marketing campaign to open a SEED account. Individuals reached by the survey team and in the
Marketing group were approached via a door-to-door marketing campaign to set goals and learn to save
more using their existing accounts (hence not offered the opportunities to open a SEED account). The
Control group received no door-to-door visit from the Bank. Active (row 2) defined as having had a
transaction in their account in the past six months. Mean balances of savings accounts include empty
accounts. Barangays are the smallest political unit in the Philippines and on average contain 1000 individuals.
Exchange rate is 50 pesos for U.S. $1.
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12. In only one instance did an individual in the control group open a SEED
account. This individual is a family member of the owners of the bank and hence
was erroneously included in the sample frame. Due to the family relationship, the
individual was dropped from the analysis.
TYING ODYSSEUS TO THE MAST 645
16. The two frames, now versus one month and six months versus seven
months, were asked roughly 10 15 minutes apart in the survey in order to avoid
individuals answering consistently merely for the sake of being consistent, and
not proactively considering the question anew. The notes to Table III detail the
exact procedures for these questions.
17. Results from the rice and ice cream questions are not reported in this
version of the paper, but they are available from the authors. Only the money
questions predicted take-up of SEED, despite the fact that responses to these
questions were fairly correlated (correlation coefficient for hyperbolic is 0.4 and
0.2 between money and rice and money and ice cream, respectively).
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TABLE III
TABULATIONS OF RESPONSES TO HYPOTHETICAL TIME PREFERENCE QUESTIONS
Somewhat
impatient Most
Patient 250 X impatient
X 250 300 300 X Total
Satisfied with savings, 15 0.055** 0.073** 0.035 0.017* 0.026* 0.003 0.001 0.001 0.002
(0.026) (0.034) (0.042) (0.010) (0.013) (0.015) (0.009) (0.011) (0.015)
Female 0.099 0.098 0.095*
(0.165) (0.062) (0.055)
Married female 0.227 0.032 0.013
(0.153) (0.060) (0.052)
Married 0.036 0.198** 0.053 0.075 0.044 0.063 0.009 0.027 0.007
(0.130) (0.082) (0.133) (0.048) (0.031) (0.045) (0.043) (0.027) (0.045)
Some college 0.045 0.091 0.015 0.020 0.051 0.020 0.008 0.042 0.030
(0.062) (0.084) (0.094) (0.024) (0.033) (0.035) (0.021) (0.029) (0.033)
Number of household members 0.009 0.011 0.009 0.000 0.003 0.005 0.004 0.006 0.001
(0.012) (0.016) (0.020) (0.005) (0.006) (0.007) (0.004) (0.005) (0.007)
Unemployed 0.318* 0.438** 0.087 0.046 0.015 0.101 0.037 0.016 0.135**
(0.184) (0.222) (0.338) (0.070) (0.083) (0.125) (0.054) (0.074) (0.060)
Age 0.002 0.002 0.002 0.001 0.000 0.001 0.001 0.002 0.001
(0.002) (0.003) (0.003) (0.001) (0.001) (0.001) (0.001) (0.001) (0.001)
Total household income 0.036
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Marginal effects are reported for coefficients. Robust standard errors are in parentheses. * significant at 10 percent; ** significant at 5 percent; *** significant at 1 percent.
In columns (1), (2), and (3), dependent variable equals zero, one, or two: zero if the respondent preferred 250 pesos in one month more than 200 pesos now; one if the respondent
preferred 300 pesos (but not 250 pesos) in one month over 200 pesos now; zero if the respondent preferred 250 pesos in one month over 200 pesos now. Columns (4), (5), and (6): the
dependent variable is either one (hyperbolic) or zero. Respondents were coded as hyperbolic if the imputed discount rate was higher for the trade-off between now and in one month than
for the imputed discount rate for the trade-off between six and seven months. Columns (7), (8), and (9): the dependent variable, Patient now, impatient later, is an indicator variable
equal to one if the respondents imputed discount rate was higher for the trade-off between six and seven months than it was for the trade-off between now and one month.
The independent variable Low income now, high in 6 months, is an indicator variable equal to one if the respondent reported being in a lower than average income month at the
TYING ODYSSEUS TO THE MAST
time of the survey, but expected to be in a higher than average income month six months after the survey. Each respondent was asked which months tend to be their high (low) (average)
months of the year. Three individuals did not completely answer the time preference questions with respect to money.
651
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tience) later are flush with cash now (later) but expect to be short
cash later (now). In order to make sense, such a story also re-
quires some element of savings constraints. Although we are
unable to test this precisely, we did ask individuals what months
are their high-income and low-income months. Females who re-
port being in a high-income month at the time of the survey and
a low-income month six months after the survey are in fact more
likely to reverse time preferences, indicating patience now and
impatience later (Table IV, column (8)). Hyperbolic reversals,
however, are not predicted by the timing of expected cash flow
(Table IV, columns (4), (5), and (6), Low income now, High in six
months row).
TABLE V
DETERMINANTS OF SEED TAKE-UP
PROBIT
Robust standard errors are in parentheses. * significant at 10 percent; ** significant at 5 percent; ***
significant at 1 percent.
Time inconsistent is defined with respect to money questions. Full details are in the notes to Table III.
TYING ODYSSEUS TO THE MAST 655
19. With respect to rice, females are 7.7 percent points more likely to take up,
whereas with respect to ice cream females are only 4 percent points more likely to
take up. However, the effects with respect to rice and ice cream are not significant.
20. We may be concerned that familial control issues, i.e., keeping money out
of the hands of demanding relatives or parents, may be just as important as
spousal control, and affect single income earners as well. Only 5 percent of the
individuals live in a household with no other adult. Although this subsample is
neither more or less likely to take up the product, little inference should be drawn
from this small sample of 34 individuals. This result is not shown in the tables.
656 QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS
23. At Green Bank, time deposits begin at amounts of 10,000 49,999, which
earn an interest rate of 4.5 percent if deposited for 30 days, and 4.8 percent if the
time deposit is for 360 days or longer.
658 QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS
24. Change in savings was chosen as the outcome of interest in equation (2)
so that coefficient estimates have the interpretation of average increase in savings
due to the treatment assignment. The results are similar when postintervention
savings level is used as the outcome variable, or when pre- and postintervention
savings data are pooled in a differences-in-differences approach. Appendix 2
reports robustness checks of the ITT analysis. Columns (5)(6) report ITT esti-
mates where postintervention savings level is regressed against treatment as-
signment and a control for preintervention savings level. ITT estimates change
little relative to estimates reported in Table VI.
TABLE VI
IMPACT ON CHANGE IN SAVINGS HELD AT BANK
OLS, PROBIT
INTENT TO
TREAT EFFECT OLS Probit
Robust standard errors are in parentheses. * significant at 10 percent; ** significant at 5 percent; *** significant at 1 percent. The dependent variable in the first two columns is the
change in total savings held at the Green Bank after six months. Column (1) regresses change in total savings balances on indicators for assignment in the commitment- and
marketing-treatment groups. The omitted group indicator in this regression corresponds to the control group. Column (2) shows the regression restricting the sample to commitment-
and marketing-treatment groups. Columns (3) and (4) repeat this regression, using change in savings balances after twelve months as a dependent variable. The dependent variable in
columns (5)(8) is a binary variable equal to 1 if balances increased by x percent. One hundred and fifty-four clients had a preintervention savings balance equal to zero. Twenty-four
of them had positive savings after twelve months. These individuals were coded as one, and those that remain at zero were coded as zero for the outcome variables for columns (5)
659
25. There are 154 clients with a preintervention savings balance equal to
zero. Twenty-four of them had positive savings after twelve months. These indi-
viduals were coded as one, and those who remain at zero were coded as zero for
these outcome variables. Results are virtually identical when these 154 clients are
dropped from the analysis.
TYING ODYSSEUS TO THE MAST 661
FIGURE I
FIGURE II
662 QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS
the product itself, rather than from simply being offered the
product. These effects support the point estimates discussed
above.
In order to calculate the Treatment on the Treated (TOT)
effectthe savings increase for those who opened a SEED ac-
count relative to clients in the control group who would have
taken up the product if it had been offered to them both the
assignment must be correlated to take-up of the SEED product,
and the treatment assignment must satisfy the exclusion restric-
tion; that is, offering the commitment product cannot have an
effect on savings except through take-up of the product. By ex-
perimental design (and internal bank operating controls enforc-
ing the experimental design), no marketing or control individuals
were permitted to open the SEED product. The ITT regressions
support that the exclusion restriction holds, but are not defini-
tive.26 We estimate the TOT to be 1715 pesos, roughly four times
larger than the ITT effect.27
26. The impact of the marketing treatment arguably reflects the impact of
being offered the savings product, since encouragement to take up a savings
product with a commitment mechanism should not prompt savings directly any
more than the encouragement to take up a regular savings product. The insig-
nificant estimate of the marketing-treatment coefficient suggests that SEED
affected savings through take-up of the SEED product alone, not the marketing of
SEED. Based on this estimate alone we cannot argue that the exclusion restric-
tion holds for certain. First, although the marketing treatment is not statistically
significantly different than the control group, the SEED treatment group is not
statistically different from the marketing-treatment group except in nonlinear
specifications (Table VI, columns (6) and (8)). Furthermore, the encouragement to
save is not identical to the SEED marketing, and it may be that the coefficient on
the encouragement treatment indicator does not provide a perfect measure of the
independent effect of SEED marketing. The TOT estimates are therefore inter-
preted as approximations of the isolated impact of voluntary SEED take-up.
27. We calculate the TOT by using assignment to treatment as an instrument
for take-up. Since preintervention savings levels for all clients who would have
taken up the account if it had been offered to them is unknown, we cannot report
a percentage point increase in savings balance for the TOT. If preintervention
savings balance for SEED account holders (treated compliers) is used as an
estimate for preintervention savings levels for all clients who would have taken up
the account had it been offered to them, then the TOT estimate represents a 318
percentage point increase in savings level. Another way to interpret the TOT is by
comparing with the control complier mean (CCM)the savings change for
would-be SEED compliers not offered the product, as done in Katz, Kling, and
Liebman [2001]. We calculate the CCM to be a decrease in savings level by 674
pesos. Therefore, the change in savings for SEED compliers is dramatically
larger than the savings outcome in absence of the treatment.
TYING ODYSSEUS TO THE MAST 663
TABLE VII
IMPACT ON FINANCIAL SAVINGS
DECILE REGRESSIONS
DEPENDENT VARIABLE: CHANGE IN TOTAL SAVINGS HELD AT BANK
Commitment Commitment
& marketing & marketing
All groups only All groups only
Sample: (1) (2) (3) (4)
Robust standard errors are in parentheses. * significant at 10 percent; ** significant at 5 percent; ***
significant at 1 percent. Column (1) reports the quantile regression (deciles) of change in total savings
balances on indicators for treatment group assignment. The omitted indicator in the regression corresponds
to the control group. Column (2) repeats the regression in column (1), but excludes the control group and thus
compares the commitment-treatment group to the marketing group. That is, the control group is dropped
from the sample in this regression. The columns (3) and (4) report the results of the same regressions using
full-year data.
TYING ODYSSEUS TO THE MAST 665
TABLE VIII
INTENT TO TREAT EFFECT OF SUBGROUPS (TWELVE MONTHS)
DEPENDENT VARIABLE: CHANGE IN TOTAL SAVINGS HELD
AT BANK AFTER TWELVE MONTHS
OLS
Sample All (1) All (2) All (3) All (4) All (5) All (6)
Robust standard errors are in parentheses. * significant at 10 percent; ** significant at 5 percent; ***
significant at 1 percent. Exchange rate is 50 pesos for U.S. $1.
666 QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS
TABLE IX
TESTS FOR NEW SAVINGS
OLS
VII. CONCLUSION
Savings requires a delay of immediate rewards for greater
future rewards and is thus considered particularly difficult for
individuals who have hyperbolic preferences or self-control prob-
lems. Individuals with such preferences, theoretically, should
have a preference for commitment. However, identifying hyper-
bolic preferences and observing a preference for commitment is
difficult. Using hypothetical survey questions, we identify indi-
viduals who exhibit impatience over near-term trade-offs but
patience over future trade-offs. Although we find this reversal
uncorrelated with most demographic and economic characteris-
tics, we do find that this reversal predicts take-up of a commit-
ment savings product, particularly for women. We put forth the
idea that this is due to the Philippine tradition of women being
responsible for household finances, and hence more in need of
finding solutions to temptation or savings problems.
Using a randomized control methodology, we evaluate the
effectiveness of a commitment savings account on financial sav-
ings. Individuals were assigned randomly to one of three groups,
a commitment-treatment group that was offered the special prod-
TYING ODYSSEUS TO THE MAST 669
A. VARIABLES USED IN
RANDOMIZATION
Distance to branch 20.850 22.620 0.009
(0.510) (0.450)
Savings balance (hundreds) 4.306 5.091 0.000
(0.130) (0.120)
Active account 0.288 0.356 0.000
(0.012) (0.011)
Penetration 0.023 0.022 0.000
(0.000) (0.000)
Mean balances (hundreds) 4.740 4.756 0.561
(0.019) (0.019)
Standard deviation of
balances (hundreds) 4.891 4.887 0.853
(0.019) (0.017)
Population (thousands) 6.984 5.757 0.000
(0.135) (0.106)
B. TREATMENT GROUP
ASSIGNMENT
Assigned to treatment group 42% 58%
Assigned to marketing group 40% 60%
Assigned to control group 46% 54%
C. OUTCOME VARIABLE:
CHANGE IN SAVINGS
BALANCE
Assigned to treatment group 45.33 476.65 0.062
(50.31) (209.99)
Assigned to marketing group 93.44 189.07 0.500
(108.65) (90.10)
Assigned to control group 13.77 65.18 0.750
(77.73) (124.24)
Full sample 48.37 292.64 0.055
(40.87) (107.44)
Sample size 1376 1777
This appendix demonstrates the observable sample selection bias of those surveyed versus those not
surveyed. The sample frame was taken from existing clients in the Green Bank database. Column (1) shows
summary statistics of those chosen for the survey but where the individual was not found or not willing to
complete the survey. Column (2) shows the summary statistics of those with a completed survey. Standard
errors are listed in parentheses below the estimates of the means. Exchange rate is 50 pesos for U.S. $1.
APPENDIX 2: ROBUSTNESS CHECKS FOR IMPACT ANALYSIS OLS
Robust standard errors are in parentheses. * significant at 10 percent; ** significant at 5 percent; *** significant at 1 percent. In columns (1)(4) the dependent variable is the change
in total savings held at the Green Bank after twelve months. Column (1) regresses total savings balances on indicators for assignment in the commitment- and marketing-treatment
groups. The omitted group indicator in this regression is the control group. Column (2) shows the regression restricting the sample to commitment- and marketing-treatment groups.
Columns (3) and (4) report the results when controls are included in the specification for marital status, education, number of household members, employment status, household income,
and squared household income. These are the same covariates used in the take-up analysis. In columns (5)(6) the dependent variable is the total twelve-month postintervention savings
level held at the Green Bank. The level of preintervention savings are included as a covariate in these columns. Exchange rate is 50 pesos for U.S. $1.
671
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HARVARD UNIVERSITY
YALE UNIVERSITY AND M.I.T. POVERTY ACTION LAB
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
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