divestiture order - definition. What is divestiture order
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%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف

THE FINDING THAT PEOPLE ARE MORE LIKELY TO RETAIN AN OBJECT THEY ALREADY OWN THAN TO ACQUIRE THAT SAME OBJECT WHEN THEY DO NOT OWN IT
Divestiture aversion; Endowment bias

International order         
CONCEPT
World order; Old World Order; World Order
In international relations, international order refers to patterned or structured relationships between actors on the international level.
world order         
CONCEPT
World order; Old World Order; World Order
¦ noun a set of arrangements established internationally for preserving global political stability.
Order (group theory)         
CARDINALITY OF A GROUP, OR WHERE THE ELEMENT A OF A GROUP IS THE SMALLEST POSITIVE INTEGER M SUCH THAT AM = E
Order of a group; Group order; Order (group); Order of a group element; Finite order
In mathematics, the order of a finite group is the number of its elements. If a group is not finite, one says that its order is infinite.

ويكيبيديا

Endowment effect

In psychology and behavioral economics, the endowment effect (also known as divestiture aversion and related to the mere ownership effect in social psychology) is the finding that people are more likely to retain an object they own than acquire that same object when they do not own it. The endowment theory can be defined as "an application of prospect theory positing that loss aversion associated with ownership explains observed exchange asymmetries."

This is typically illustrated in two ways. In a valuation paradigm, people's maximum willingness to pay (WTP) to acquire an object is typically lower than the least amount they are willing to accept (WTA) to give up that same object when they own it—even when there is no cause for attachment, or even if the item was only obtained minutes ago. In an exchange paradigm, people given a good are reluctant to trade it for another good of similar value. For example, participants first given a Swiss chocolate bar were generally willing to trade it for a coffee mug, whereas participants first given the coffee mug were generally unwilling to trade it for the chocolate bar.

A more controversial third paradigm used to elicit the endowment effect is the mere ownership paradigm, primarily used in experiments in psychology, marketing, and organizational behavior. In this paradigm, people who are randomly assigned to receive a good ("owners") evaluate it more positively than people who are not randomly assigned to receive the good ("controls"). The distinction between this paradigm and the first two is that it is not incentive-compatible. In other words, participants are not explicitly incentivized to reveal the extent to which they truly like or value the good.

The endowment effect can be equated to the behavioural model willingness to accept or pay (WTAP), a formula sometimes used to find out how much a consumer or person is willing to put up with or lose for different outcomes. However, this model has come under recent criticism as potentially inaccurate.

أمثلة من مجموعة نصية لـ٪ 1
1. Companies doing humanitarian work in the Sudan are exempt from the divestiture order.