Анотація:
Most economic theories assume that the discount people they apply to the future – the
weight given to the future relative to the present in their decision making — is fixed,
exogenously determined, and essentially the same across a society. Relevance of this
assumption derives from the fact that this parameter of an individual’s choice is
critical in determining the likelihood of a person’s engagement in cooperative action, as
well as the likelihood that they will abide by democratic principles and participate
constructively in the development of efficient and cooperative markets. Using a
sample of Ukrainian youth — those who have emigrated to the West to complete their
studies as compared to those who remain in Ukraine — we question the validity of this
assumption. We suggest that not only are those students who travel to the West
different from Ukraine’s student population generally in terms of the time discounting
they apply to the future, but also that this discount changes as a function of one’s
length of stay in the West so as to make them more amenable to cooperative action.