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Mean-variance and expected utility: The borch paradox

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posted on 2024-11-14, 12:47 authored by David JohnstoneDavid Johnstone, Dennis Lindley
The model of rational decision-making in most of economics and statistics is expected utility theory (EU) axiomatised by von Neumann and Morgenstern, Savage and others. This is less the case, however, in financial economics and mathematical finance, where investment decisions are commonly based on the methods of mean-variance (MV) introduced in the 1950s by Markowitz. Under the MV framework, each available investment opportunity ("asset") or portfolio is represented in just two dimensions by the ex ante mean and standard deviation (μ,σ) of the financial return anticipated from that investment. Utility adherents consider that in general MV methods are logically incoherent. Most famously, Norwegian insurance theorist Borch presented a proof suggesting that two-dimensional MV indifference curves cannot represent the preferences of a rational investor (he claimed that MV indifference curves "do not exist"). This is known as Borch's paradox and gave rise to an important but generally little-known philosophical literature relating MV to EU. We examine the main early contributions to this literature, focussing on Borch's logic and the arguments by which it has been set aside.

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Citation

Johnstone, D. & Lindley, D. (2013). Mean-variance and expected utility: The borch paradox. Statistical Science, 28 (2), 223-237.

Journal title

Statistical Science

Volume

28

Issue

2

Pagination

223-237

Language

English

RIS ID

115707

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