
The Behavioral Economics in Marketing’s Podcast Loss Aversion in the Wake of a Natural Disaster | Lessons From the Fire | Behavioral Economics in Marketing
Sep 29, 2022
Discussion of how loss aversion shapes behavior after a natural disaster. Stories of FOMO around aid and chaotic free giveaways. Examples of panic buying as a way to regain control. Accounts of rapid price spikes and ethical questions around taking advantage in crisis.
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Loss Feels Stronger Than Gain
- Loss aversion means losses feel about twice as painful as equivalent gains feel pleasurable.
- Sandra Thomas-Caminol explains this asymmetry as a core driver of post-disaster behavior.
Owning Changes How People Fear Loss
- Loss aversion differs from risk aversion because it focuses on losing owned things rather than avoiding uncertain outcomes.
- Sandra Thomas-Caminol notes survivors act by securing assets, buying more insurance, and checking detectors more often.
Three-Minute Evacuation
- Sandra Thomas-Caminol recounts spotting a wall of fire in her backyard and evacuating within three minutes with nothing saved.
- She describes that moment as the last time they saw their house, framing her firsthand loss experience.
