Mental accounting is the implicit system by which people assign financial transactions to separate cognitive budget categories. Thaler (1985) found median willingness to pay of $2.65 from a fancy resort hotel versus $1.50 from a run-down grocery store for an identical beer. "Mental Accounting and Consumer Choice" also found 56 of 87 Cornell undergraduates preferred a $50 and $25 win separately over a combined $75 win.
What the Study Found
66 of 87 Cornell undergraduates judged two separate tax bills ($100 and $50) as more upsetting than a single $150 bill. 61 of 87 preferred a net $20 lottery win over receiving a $100 win and an $80 rug-damage loss separately. 63 of 87 judged a net $175 car repair loss as more upsetting than a $200 repair alongside a separate $25 football pool win. 1984 Super Bowl tickets were priced at $60 per seat; the 1981 Holmes-Cooney boxing match top price was $600.
Methodology
Thaler (1985) uses survey experiments at Cornell University and with executive development program participants in the United States. The coding experiment used 87 undergraduate statistics students; transaction utility experiments used first-year MBA students and regular beer drinkers in executive development programs. No time period is stated for the survey experiments; household budget interviews cited in Section 3.2 were conducted in 1982. Each scenario was designed to be financially equivalent across conditions, with reservation price questions structured to elicit true willingness to pay.
Key Statistics
| Metric | Finding | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Beer willingness to pay — fancy resort hotel | $2.65 median | Executive development program, regular beer drinkers |
| Beer willingness to pay — run-down grocery store | $1.50 median | Identical product, same subjects |
| Segregated gains preference | 56 of 87 preferred $50 + $25 separately over $75 combined | World Series lottery scenario, Cornell undergraduates |
| Integrated losses preference | 66 of 87 preferred one $150 tax bill over two bills of $100 + $50 | IRS + state tax letter scenario, Cornell undergraduates |
| Integrated mixed gain preference | 61 of 87 preferred net $20 win over $100 win + $80 loss separately | Lottery win + rug damage scenario, Cornell undergraduates |
| Silver lining preference | 63 of 87 judged net $175 loss as more upsetting than $200 loss + $25 win separately | Car damage + football pool win scenario, Cornell undergraduates |
| 1984 Super Bowl ticket price | $60 (all seats) | Official price; black market reached $300 and up |
| 1981 Holmes-Cooney fight top ticket price | $600 | One-time event; no ongoing buyer-seller relationship |
| Total purchase utility | w(z, p, p*) = v(p̄, -p) + v(-p: -p*) | Acquisition utility + transaction utility; Equation (2) |
| Purchase decision rule | w(z_i, p_i, p*_i) / p_i ≥ k | Consumer buys if utility-to-price ratio meets shadow price k; Equation (3) |
Why This Matters
Sellers can exploit the silver lining principle: a rebate framed as a separate gain yields more positive transaction utility than an equivalent price cut. Markets with stable reference prices may not clear at equilibrium; sellers weigh short-run price gains against long-run loss of goodwill. Investors who mentally segregate portfolios may forgo efficient rebalancing between accounts they treat as non-fungible. Gift-giving behavior reflects mental accounting: recipients value luxury items as gifts precisely because their own budget constraints prevent purchasing them directly.