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Why Your Brain Saves Money in Separate Mental Accounts

Why Your Brain Saves Money in Separate Mental Accounts

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Episode 35 of Behavioral Economics with Fexingo digs into mental accounting — the cognitive quirk that makes us treat a $50 gift card differently from $50 cash, even though they're worth exactly the same. Lucas and Luna explore Richard Thaler's classic framing experiment, where people were less likely to spend a windfall on a concert ticket if they had already mentally allocated that money elsewhere. They connect it to real-world examples: why households save for a vacation while carrying credit card debt, and how Uber's surge pricing exploits our mental categories. The hosts also discuss how to hack your own mental accounting to make better financial decisions — from paying down high-interest debt first to using separate accounts deliberately. A concrete, research-backed look at why your brain's personal ledgers often work against your wallet. #MentalAccounting #RichardThaler #BehavioralEconomics #ProspectTheory #SunkCost #FramingEffect #WindfallMoney #GiftCardSpending #DebtVsSavings #FinancialDecisionMaking #CognitiveBias #Economics #Business #FexingoBusiness #BusinessPodcast #BehavioralFinance #PersonalFinance #DecisionBias Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
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