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Samenvatting Articles Financial Decision Making 2025/2026

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Summary of all articles for Financial Decision Making - Tilburg University Masters I received an 8 for this subject with the help of my summary!

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Money & Materialism
Money as tool, money as drug: The biological
psychology of a strong incentive – Lea & Webley

Two ways in which money is a motivator:
1. Used as a tool/instrumentally  to obtain biological relevant
incentives.
2. Imitate the action of natural incentives

Conclusions:
 A purely Tool Theory view of money motivation cannot explain all
observed phenomena.
 Adding Drug Theory helps make sense of the things Tool Theory
can’t explain.
 According to Drug Theory, money taps into basic human instincts
such as trading (linked to reciprocal altruism) and object play.

A biological explanation of behaviour (like the motivation for money)
uses evolutionary reasoning: people do things either because (a) it gives a
selective advantage now, (b) it gave such an advantage in the past, or (c)
it’s a by-product of another adaptive tendency. Importantly, this doesn’t
mean behaviour if fixed or purely innate – human instincts always interact
with culture and society. For example, the instinct (finding a mate) is
universal, but the way it plays out is shaped by cultural rules and
traditions (e.g. arranged marriages or not).
 Examples:
a. Washing your hands
b. Fear of snakes
c. Reading (we evolved big brains and language skills)

Money is studied here in its literal sense (coins, credit, etc.), not as a
metaphor for property or possessions.
 Money counts as ‘money’ if it functions as a:
o Medium of exchange  you can use it to trade for goods and
services.
o Unit of account  it provides a standard way to measure
value.
o And store of value  it keeps its value over time so you can
save it and spend it later.

Money motivates people like basic drives (e.g. food or sex). Specifically:
a) Incentive  people are more likely to do actions that can earn
them money.
b) Reinforcer  people are more likely to repeat actions that
previously gave them money.

,Most strong human motivations are easy to explain from a biological
perspective because they have two key features:
1. Adaptiveness  they guide people toward or away from things
that matter for survival or reproduction (e.g. hunger, sex, social
connections).
2. Darwinian continuity  similar or related motives exist in other
animals, although in humans they can be more complex and shaped
by culture.
Money motivation is different:
- It doesn’t directly help survival or reproduction.
- There’s no obvious equivalent in other animals.
- Money is too recent in human history to have led to genetic
adaption.
- Culture strongly influences how we use money, but it’s unclear
whether there’s any underlying biological drive.

Question the article tries to answer:
Is there a biological reason why money is such a powerful incentive?

Tool Theory
 Money as a rational, instrumental medium of exchange.
 Money is an incentive only because it can be exchanged for goods
and services, which are the real incentives (and those have clear
evolutionary roots).
o It is a means to an end, not a motivator on its own.
 We do not need the psychology of money – only an understanding of
how people use it as an instrument.

Drug Theory
 Money has psychological/emotional effects beyond instrumental
value.
 Money is a functionless motivator that triggers our motivational
systems without being directly biologically useful.
 Money is a kind of ‘psychological drug’ – it can trigger our brain’s
reward systems by mimicking natural incentives.
o Money can ‘act like’ natural incentives at a cognitive level.
o Brain imaging studies  money activates specific brain areas,
and immediate monetary incentives stimulate parts of the
brain that are associated with immediate reward, not delated
reward.
 This helps explain why money can feel addictive, give immediate
satisfaction, and sometimes lead to harmful behaviour.

Theories of money
The economic theory of money
- Money has three primary functions: it is a medium of exchange, a
unit of account and a store of value.

, - Two main types of money (that distinguish between how value is
established):
o Commodity/metalist model  backed by a real, desirable
substance (like gold or silver).
 The value comes from the biological aspect of the
underlying commodity. This is an example of Drug
Theory.
o Fiat/chartalist money  value comes from government
declaration, accepted by society as legal tender.  Tool
Theory.

Psychological theories of money
 Depth psychology (Freud): money interest stems from early
childhood development. Interest in collecting or controlling coins
reflects the same drives that were active during toilet training
(pleasure and control) Drug Theory.
 Operant psychology (Skinner): money acts as a token that gains
value through association with rewards, so through conditioning and
not logic  Drug Theory.
 Functional autonomy (Allport): motivation to acquire money can
become self-sustaining, even if it originally came from other basic
drives  Drug Theory.
 Cognitive development (Piagetians): children gradually learn how
to use money and navigate adult economic systems  Tool Theory.

Sociological theories of money
 Classic sociology
o Marx: saw money as ‘commodity fetishism,’ where value
becomes detached from the labour that created it  Drug
Theory.
 Money comes from labour being turned into
commodities, then into money – this causes alienation.
 Commodities are treated as if they have their own life
(commodity fetishism).
 Money motivation is like an illusion – drug theory.
o Weber: connected money accumulation with the Protestant
ethic of hard work and discipline; sought for its own sake 
Drug Theory.
 Protestant work ethic = work is good, but spending is
bad.
 Result: people save and collect money for its own
sake.
o Simmel: Money turns goods into commodities and can even
become something people desire for its own sake; can be both
a tool and an object of desire  both Tool and Drug Theory
elements.
 Money creates more impersonal and abstract relations is
society.

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