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Your
Money and Your Brain
by
Doug French
by Doug French
DIGG THIS
Comedian Jay
Leno recently had a bit about pilots wanting passengers to take
on the responsibility of subduing terrorists on the plane. "First
I had to start pumping my own gas, then I had to scan my own groceries
at the checkout counter, now in order to fly, we must be responsible
for making sure terrorists don’t hijack the planes?"
Yes, a cruel
combination of inflation and labor laws is breaking down the division
of labor. But forget the indignity of pumping your own gas, what
is most damaging to balance sheets and retirement nest eggs is that
people now must manage their own investment portfolios.
The days of
defined pension plans are gone, unless you are a government worker.
The rest of us are left to manage our own 401k’s, IRA’s and any
other extra money that the government doesn’t grab by overt taxation
– or the stealth variety of inflation.
Unfortunately
most people’s brains are just not equipped for the task. Smart people
make stupid financial decisions according to Jason Zweig, who takes
us on a tour of the investor’s brain in Your
Money and Your Brain: How The New Science of Neuroeconomics Can
Help Make You Rich.
Of course that
"help make you rich" part is the kind of hyperbole that
sells books and likely sends a dopamine rush to the brain of a book-buying
investor. The brain has 100 billion neurons and only one-thousandth
of one percent produce dopamine, but "this minuscule neural
minority wields enormous power over your investing decisions,"
cautions Zweig. One would think he would be more careful with the
titling of YMYB.
Dopamine takes
as little as a twentieth of second to reach your decision centers,
estimating the value of an expected reward and more importantly
propelling you to action to capture that reward. "We’ve evolved
to be that way," explains psychologist Kent Berridge, "because
passively knowing about the future is not good enough."
Of course the
effect of all this is what Zweig refers to as "the prediction
addiction." Humans hate randomness. We want to predict the
unpredictable, which originates in the dopamine centers of the reflective
brain, according to Zweig, leading humans to see patterns where
none really exist. The whole technical analysis field that Wall
Street embraces, is based upon the human desire to predict and when
seeing two occurrences in repetition, people believe (or want to
believe) that a trend is in process that, most importantly, they
can profit from.
When Parkinson’s
patients are given drugs to allow their brains to be more receptive
to dopamine, they have the insatiable urge to gamble. When these
drugs are stopped, the gambling stops immediately. But unfortunately,
when we get what we expect, no dopamine rush ensues. "A reward
that matches expectations leaves your dopamine neurons in a kind
of steady-state hum," writes Zweig, citing the research of
Read Montague and Wolfram Schultz. "[G]etting exactly what
you expected is neurally unexciting."
So, like drug
addicts, who need to take increasing amounts to get the same fix,
investors must speculate in increasingly riskier investments to
achieve the same dopamine kick. And unexpected gains really fire
up the dopamine. Neurophysiologist Schultz explains that the "dopamine
system is more interested in novel stimuli than familiar ones."
Zweig also
explores how humans are overconfident in their abilities. That our
perceptions of investment risk are in a constant state of flux,
depending on our memories of past experience, and most of our fears
about finances are misdirected.
Okay,
so to read Zweig, we’re just a bunch of neurotic gambling junkies
looking to get high from either playing slots, going to bingo night,
or rolling the dice on penny stocks. What’s a prudent person to
do? You’d be surprised. Sure, Zweig counsels us to put our money
in mutual funds and forget about picking individual investments.
But he goes further, stressing that we should try to find happiness.
He says to breath deep to reach an inner calm, turn off the tube
to stop envy, surprise someone with an unexpected gift raising both
yours and the receivers dopamine levels, and try something new each
week even if its just reading a different magazine to gain new perspective,
are just some of Zweig’s ideas. He also warns the elderly that aging
makes us accentuate the positive and eliminate the negative, making
old people susceptible to con-men, shysters and their get-rich-quick
schemes.
Reading Zweig
won’t make you rich, but might help make you happy and keep you
from going broke.
February
25, 2008
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and associate editor
for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies.
Copyright
© 2008 Doug French
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