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Task completion without commitment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2025

David J. Freeman*
Affiliation:
Department of Economics, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, Canada
Kevin Laughren*
Affiliation:
Smith School of Business, Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada
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Abstract

We conduct an experiment where participants make choices between completing a task now or waiting to complete it in the future. We vary the dates when a task can be completed and the effort required at each date. We infer participants’ preferences for when to complete a task and their expectations about how their future preferences will differ from their current ones. Our findings indicate that most participants prefer to complete tasks immediately, even if it demands more effort than waiting. Their choices generally align with the principles of time consistency, monotonicity, and time invariance. We show that quasi-hyperbolic discounting, anticipatory utility, fixed costs, decision costs, and cost-of-keeping-track are all unable to provide a reasonable account of both our findings and related experiments.

JEL classification

Information

Type
Original Paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2024
Figure 0

Table 1 Classification of four completion functions within one quad

Figure 1

Table 2 Identification of all observable choice combinations within a quad

Figure 2

Table 3 Experiment effort profiles

Figure 3

Table 4 Proportion choosing to work “today” in two-date effort schedules (Non-endogenous subsample)

Figure 4

Table 5 Classifying choice combinations within a quad by effort profile (all data)

Figure 5

Table 6 Classifying choice combinations within a quad by effort profile (non-endogenous subsample)

Figure 6

Fig. 1 Participant Houtman-Maks index - monotonicity

Figure 7

Table 7 Time invariance violations by choice set (non-endogenous subsample)

Figure 8

Table 8 Results of structural logit estimation (non-endogenous subsample)

Figure 9

Table 9 Classifying choice combinations within a quad by effort profile (non-endougenous subsample)

Figure 10

Table 10 Time invariance by effort schedule (non-endogenous subsample)

Figure 11

Table 11 Structural logit estimates (non-endogenous subsample)

Figure 12

Table 12 Variance-covariance matrix of structural logit estimates (Non-endogenous subsample)

Figure 13

Table 13 Variance-Covariance Matrix of Parameter Estimates using Delta Method

Figure 14

Fig. 2 Experiment chore The status at the top of this figure implies this is the chore screen on a day when a participant has chosen to only complete the minimum of one chore

Figure 15

Fig. 3 Excerpt of experiment decision table (Monday) Effort schedules like Schedule No. 2 and Schedule No. 6 are displayed to participants so they are aware of all possible schedules-that-count, but the buttons are fixed on “Not Today” for these schedules because they are Not Available (NA) to be completed on Monday

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Freeman and Laughren supplementary material

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