DiscoverThe Takeaway: Story of the DayWhy We Stay When We Know We Should Leave
Why We Stay When We Know We Should Leave

Why We Stay When We Know We Should Leave

Update: 2013-05-20
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We’ve all found ourselves in bad situations, and chosen not to get out. On a personal level, those situations might be a bad jobs or unfulfilling relationships. On a bigger level, they might be international conflicts or government cover-ups. But regardless of scope, one question persists: Why is it that we so often stay, and for so long? To quote Kenny Rogers: Why don’t we know when to walk away, or for that matter, know when to run?


Turns out there’s a reason, and that reason has a name. It’s called “the sunk cost fallacy.”


Daniel Molden is an associate professor of social psychology at Northwestern University who specializes in motivated judgment decision making, and he knows a lot about why we stay when it's not in our best interest. 

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Why We Stay When We Know We Should Leave

Why We Stay When We Know We Should Leave

Public Radio International and WNYC Radio