Recent research has demonstrated that choices between gambles are systematically influenced
by the way they are expressed. Kahneman and Tversky's Prospect Theory (1979)
explains many of these "framing" effects as shifts in the point of reference from which prospects
are evaluated. This paper demonstrates the applicability of the reference point concept to
intertemporal choice. Three experiments demonstrate that when people choose between immediate
and delayed consumption, the reference point used to evaluate alternatives can significantly
influence choice. The first study elicited relative preference for immediate and delayed
consumption using three methods, each of which differently framed choices between alternatives
offering identical end-state consumption. The conventional discounted utility model
predicts that the three methods of elicitation should yield similar estimates of time preference,
but preferences were found to differ in accordance with a reference point model. The second
and third studies extend and replicate the results from the first, the third using real rather than
hypothetical choices.