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Behavioral economics (and the related fields behavioral finance and neuro-economics) is a field that integrates economics with psychology. Behavioral economics constrasts with neoclassical economics especially in two subjects: that people are always rational and are always well-informed. It concentrates more on micro decisions and makes heavy use of the experimental method. Two Nobel Prizes in economics were given to people working in this field: Daniel Kahneman, in 2002 (who shared his prize with the diehard libertarian Vernom Smith) and Richard Thaler, in 2017. Other notable behavioral economists include Amos Tversky, Herb Simon, Dan Ariely, and George Loewenstein.
"Rational" in an economics context refers to behaviour that is ultimately to the benefit of the individual rather than evidence-based scientific reasoning.
There are a number of ways in which behavioural economics looks beyond the assumptions of classical economics. Some of these are listed below. However, most of these issues are not entirely overlooked in classical economics, but behavioural economics might place more emphasis on these factors or add an extra dimension to their consideration.
Many of the principles of behavioral economics go directly against right-wing libertarianism as analysis of the inherent irrationalities in a market disproves the notion that capitalism left to its own devices can do no wrong.
The best example is the dynamics of racism and sexism. Unlike the Austrian school (and to a lesser extent the Chicago school), which stipulate that racial discrimination and the gender pay gap do not exist, BE actively points to unconscious biases that harm companies in their hiring process.