Temporary changes in biological state, such as hunger, can impact decision making
differently for men and women. Food scarcity is correlated with a host of negative
economic outcomes. Two explanations for this correlation are that hunger affects
economic preferences directly or that hunger creates a mindset that focuses on
scarcity management to the detriment of other decisions. To test these predictions,
we conduct a lab-in-the-feld experiment in a health screening clinic in Shanghai,
recruiting participants who finish their annual physical exam either before or after
they have eaten breakfast. We compare the hungry and sated groups on their risk,
time and generosity preferences as well as their cognitive performance. Our results
show that men and women respond to hunger in opposite directions, thus hunger
reduces the gender gap in decision quality, risk aversion and cognitive performance,
but creates one in generosity. Finally, we examine several biomarkers and find that
higher blood lipid levels are correlated with greater choice inconsistency, risk aversion and generosity. We contribute to emerging insights on the biological foundations for economic preferences and outcomes
individuals visiting one of the health
screening clinics of the company MeiNian.