There has recently been an escalated interest in the interface between psychology and economics. The Cambridge Handbook of Psychology and Economic Behaviour is a valuable reference dedicated to improving our understanding of the economic mind and economic behaviour. Employing empirical methods - including laboratory and field experiments, observations, questionnaires and interviews - the Handbook provides comprehensive coverage of theory and method, financial and consumer behaviour, the environment and biological perspectives. This second edition also includes new chapters on topics such as neuroeconomics, unemployment, debt, behavioural public finance, and cutting-edge work on fuzzy trace theory and robots, cyborgs and consumption. With distinguished contributors from a variety of countries and theoretical backgrounds, the Handbook is an important step forward in the improvement of communications between the disciplines of psychology and economics that will appeal to academic researchers and graduates in economic psychology and behavioral economics.
                 
            
            
            
            
                
                    Introduction Alan Lewis
 Part I. Theory and Method:
1. Theory and method in economics and psychology Denis Hilton
 2. What lessons does the 'replication crisis' in psychology hold for experimental economics? Nick Bardsley
 Part II. Finance:
3. Looking into the future: how investors forecast the stock market J. Michael Collins, Werner De Bondt and Karl-Erik Wärneryd
 4. Speculative bubbles: insight from behavioral finance Werner De Bondt
 5. Intertemporal choice: choosing for the future Daniel Read, Rebecca McDonald and Lisheng He
 6. Debt: beyond Homo Economicus Matthew Sparkes, Julia Gumy and Brendan Burchell
 7. Unemployment and well-being Alex J. Wood and Brendan Burchell
 8. Money management in households Bernadette Kamleitner, Eva Marckhgott and Erich Kirchler
 9. Socially responsible investing Christopher Cowton
 Part III. Private Sector Consumer Behaviour and the Firm:
10. Consumption, income and happiness Aaron Ahuvia
 11. Important non-materialistic factors in consumer decision making Gerrit Antonides and Chris van Klaveren
 12. An economic psychology of the marketing firm Gordon R. Foxall
 Part IV. Public Sector Consumer Behaviour:
13. Tax psychology Jerome Olsen, Minjo Kang and Erich Kirchler
 14. New ways of understanding tax compliance: from the laboratory to the real world Michael Hallsworth
 15. 'Individual failure' and a behavioural public sector economics Lory Barile, John Cullis and Philip Jones
 Part V. Environment:
16. Towards sustainable lifestyles: understanding the policy challenge Tim Jackson and Carmen Smith
 17. Understanding residential sustainable energy and policy preferences Goda Perlaviciute, Linda Steg and Ellen van der Werff
 18. Household production of photovoltaic energy: issues in economic behavior Paul C. Stern, Inga Wittenberg, Kimberly S. Wolske and Ingo Kastner
 19. Economic and psychological determinants of ownership, use and changes in use of private cars Tommy Gärling and Margareta Friman
 20. Voluntary individual carbon trading: friend or foe Clive L. Spash and Hendrik Theine
 Part VI. Biological Perspectives:
21. Neuroeconomics Ifat Levy and Daniel Ehrlich
 22. The importance of evolutionary psychology for the understanding of economic behaviour Detlef Fechtenhauer and Anne-Sophie Lang
 23. Evolutionary economics and psychology Ulrich Wilt
 Part VII. New Horizons:
24. Motivation and awards Bruno Frey and Jana Gallus
 25. Fuzzy-trace theory: judgments, decisions and neuroeconomics David M. N. Garavito, Rebecca B. Weldon and Valerie Reyna
 26. Robots, cyborgs and consumption Russell Belk
 27. End piece: behavioural change and 'nudge' Alan Lewis
 Index.