The Mental Accounting and its Impact in Reality

Authors

  • Pinyan Huang Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61173/z0p1k359

Keywords:

Mental accounting, sunk cost, mental budgeting, decision making

Abstract

Mental accounting theory is critically important because it provides a revolutionary lens through which to understand real-world financial behavior, moving beyond the traditional economic model of the perfectly rational actor. Its significance lies in explaining the systematic and predictable irrationalities that govern how people spend, save, and value money. By revealing that individuals compartmentalize wealth into non-fungible mental accounts—treating a tax refund differently from a salary bonus, for instance—the theory deciphers puzzles like why people simultaneously carry high-interest debt and maintain low-interest savings. This understanding is foundational for behavioral economics, informing everything from effective public policy design and retirement savings programs (like automatic enrollment) to personal financial advice and marketing strategies. It ultimately acknowledges that financial decisions are not purely mathematical but are deeply psychological, driven by subjective emotional framing rather than objective reality. In our real life, there’s usually irrational behaviors when people are making decisions about consumption or investment, due to the effect of mental judgement.

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Published

2025-12-19

Issue

Section

Articles