The metaphor of "pain of paying" has shaped behavioral economics for decades, yet direct evidence that spending money elicits literal pain remains elusive. Building on Camerer et al.'s (2005) neuroeconomic framework, we present converging evidence from two studies demonstrating that payment decisions activate affective pain-processing circuits. In a correlational pilot study, we use fMRI during incentive-compatible purchase decisions to show that activity in the anterior insula—a key region in affective pain processing—correlates parametrically with price magnitude. Critically, we find that paying with money activates affective but not somatosensory pain networks in the brain, whereas paying with electric shocks activates both. In the main study, we establish causality through a novel reverse-placebo paradigm in which participants believed they had taken pain-modulating drugs. Only affective pain enhancing placebos influenced valuation: participants given affective pain “enhancers” exhibited higher willingness to pay than those given affective “relievers,” though neither condition differed significantly from the untreated control. These findings provide the first causal evidence that the pain of paying constitutes a genuine affective experience that shapes economic valuation. We discuss implications for models of consumer choice, mental accounting, and behavioral policy interventions aimed at improving financial decision-making.
Robitaille et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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