Profile
Professor Darren Duxbury
Chair in Finance
- Email: darren.duxbury@ncl.ac.uk
- Telephone: +44 (0)191 208 1517
- Address: 缅北禁地 Business School
Frederick Douglass Centre, room 3.47
缅北禁地 Helix
2 Science Square
缅北禁地 upon Tyne
NE4 5TG
Professor Duxbury is an international expert in the areas of experimental and behavioral finance. He publishes in world-leading, internationally excellent, academic journals, including Management Science, Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, British Journal of Management, and Journal of Banking and Finance, along with Journal of Empirical Finance, European Journal of Finance, Journal of International Financial Markets Institutions and Money, International Review of Financial Analysis, Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, Economics Letters, Accounting and Business Research and British Accounting Review. His interdisciplinary work is published in international journals across various disciplines, including Risk Analysis, Journal of Economic Psychology, Legal Studies and Sustainability. He is the author of two invited review papers in the Review of Behavioral Finance, a research monograph on repeated financial decision making and presents regularly at international conferences.
Professor Duxbury is an invited member of the Behavioural Finance Working Group and Associate Editor for the Review of Behavioral Finance. He is also Associate Editor for The Financial Review, the official journal of the Eastern Finance Association in the USA. Darren has a long standing affiliation with the , University of Leeds, where was Visiting Professor (2013-2019). He founded the Behavioural Research in Finance (BRiF) group at 缅北禁地, now a theme in the wider Finance Research Community here, for which he served as Research Community Lead 2018-2025.
Professor Duxbury's research is recognised internationally (he was awarded a Citation of Excellence by Emerald Management Reviews for one of the top 50 papers worldwide in 2008) and has informed research by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Whitehouse discussions. He is named in the House of Lords inquiry into the use of behaviour change interventions as a means of achieving government policy goals (Behaviour Change, Evidence Session No. 3, 16-11-2010) in the context of behaviour change expertise in the UK.
Professor Duxbury's expertise has been sought by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) in relation to personal accounts and auto-enrolment and by the Personal Accounts Delivery Authority (PADA) and the National Employment Savings Trust (NEST) in relation to attitudes to loss in pensions. He provided academic insight to Aviva's "" campaign, see also:
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- News release -
- News release -
Funded work for the Money Advice Service lead to the publication of a report in September 2017 - Financial Rules of Thumb: A Review of the Evidence and Its Implications - available on the MAS website . Prior to publication the report informed a March 2017 Financial Advice Working Group report prepared for HM Treasury and the Financial Conduct Authority - Rules of Thumb and Nudges: Improving the financial well-being of UK consumers - available on the FCA website . For easy insight and an overview of the evidence see the news story .
In an academic-industry research collaboration funded by the National Westminster Bank (NatWest), Professor Duxbury is investigating the behavioral drivers of UK individuals' intentions to use cash. The research has far-reaching implications for the cash processing industry in particular, and the banking sector more generally, along with wide-ranging policy implications associated with the world-wide trend towards cashless societies. The behavioral insights support the view that cash plays an important budgetary role for many in society, including, but not limited to, those consumers with low levels of financial literacy. The importance of trait habitual behavior in consumer payment method intention suggests some sections of society will likely resist payment method innovation, though evidence in relation to exogenous shocks supports the view that payment intention habits are susceptible to change. Insights from the research have been disseminated via academic and practitioner conferences, including as invited plenary speaker at the Mint Directors Conference 2022, and industry outlets, including Cash, Payment and CBDC News (), with a summary available via the Chartered Bankers Knowledge Hub . Select findings from the research were presented as to the Treasury Committee Inquiry on Acceptance of Cash, informing parliamentary debate, and are cited in the published (p. 32, para. 70).
Professor Duxbury is a member of the Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) Academic Advisory Group established by the Bank of England and HM Treasury to advise on the design phase of the 'digital pound' (D£). See for more information on the work of the CBDC AAG. In the context of a D£, Professor Duxbury's research on payment methods has featured in various outlets, including , NU Press Office, and .
Professor Duxbury is academic supervisor on the Arrow project with Aspire Wellbeing Co exploring what really drives women’s financial behaviour, and what helps create lasting financial wellbeing. For a brief overview of the project, see The Money Blog entry "What Really Drives Women’s Financial Behaviour (and Why Awareness Is the First Step)" .
Professor Duxbury was a Co-I in the UKRI GCRF Living Deltas Hub (), an international, interdisciplinary research project working with delta-dwellers and policy makers to develop solutions that can help better realise the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in delta-specific contexts. He applies behavioural expertise and psychological insight to better understand economic behaviour and risk trade-offs in the context of climate and deltas.
Bibliographic links
Google Scholar:
ResearchGate:
ORCID ID:
Scopus Author ID: 55916769900
Research interests:
My research is concerned with the study of financial behaviour, from both an empirical and experimental perspective, encompassing individual, household and corporate behaviours over a broad range of financial decisions, including investing, saving, debt, pensions and corporate investment decisions. I aim to provide a deeper understanding of why individuals make the financial decisions they do.
My research expertise is in the complementary areas of experimental and behavioural finance, to which I apply insights from the decision research and psychology literatures.
Areas of application and recent projects include:
- Behavioral drivers of intentions to use cash.
- Climate risk-risk trade-offs
- How reference points impact on individual and corporate decisions.
- How cultural differences impact on individual and corporate decisions.
- How emotions impact on economic and financial decisions.
- How prior outcomes impact on economic and financial decisions, including investor trading behavior, stock selection and portfolio composition, and escalation of commitment (sunk cost effect).
- Financial asset allocation decisions, including retirement saving and annuity decisions.
- Mental accounting effects in individual decision-making.
- Perceptions of financial risk and volatility.
- Perceptions and expectations of price changes.
- Experimental financial markets.
PhD supervision:
If you are interested in research in the areas of experimental and behavioral accounting/ economics/ finance, either in relation to the specific research topics above or more broadly, and you meet the PhD entry criteria of 缅北禁地 Business School, please email me your CV and research proposal.
Professional activities:
- Associate Editor for: Review of Behavioral Finance
- Associate Editor for: The Financial Review
- Associate Editor for: Journal of Sustainable Finance & Accounting
- Eminent member of: Behavioural Finance Working Group,
- Member of Organising Committee for: 2017 Behavioural Finance Working Group Conference, Queen Mary University London, England, 12-13 June, 2017
- Member of Organising Committee for: International Association for Research in Economic Psychology/The Society for the Advancement of Behavioral Economics – Workshop on Economic Psychology: New Methods and Findings, University of Bolton, England, 25-26 March, 2010
- Reviewer for: American Economic Review, Econometrica, Management Science, Review of Economic Studies, Economic Journal, Journal of Banking and Finance, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, Journal of Economic Psychology, Managerial and Decision Economics, Scandinavian Journal of Economics, Decision Analysis, Review of Behavioral Finance, International Journal of Behavioural Accounting and Finance, Accounting and Business Research, British Accounting Review, Journal of Pension Economics and Finance, Journal of Financial Counseling and Planning, Journal of Behavioral and Experimental Economics, and International Journal of Forecasting, among many others
- Project rapporteur and funding application reviewer for the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
- Funding application reviewer for UK Research and Innovation (UKRI)
- Grant proposal reviewer for Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)
- Research proposal reviewer for Athens University of Economics and Business
Awards and academic recognition:
- 2008 Journal of Economic Psychology paper awarded a Citation of Excellence award as one of the top 50 papers of 2008 (from 15,000 reviewed) by Emerald Management Reviews
- 2007 Finance Letters paper listed on SSRN's Top Ten download list 2008-2012
- 2005 Journal of Economic Psychology paper listed in the Top25 Hottest Articles on ScienceDirect.com for the journal.
Keywords:
- Behavioral finance (behavioural finance)
- Behavioural Research in Finance (BRiF)
- Emotions
- Experimental finance
- Investor behavior (investor behaviour)
- Prior outcomes; sunk costs; escalation of commitment
- Reference points
- Risk-risk trade-off
Professor Duxbury has over 30 years teaching experience across the accounting and finance disciplines. He developed and delivers ACC3003 Issues in Behavioural Finance, an exemplar of research-led teaching, in which he brings his research expertise to the fore. He also provides PhD training sessions on NBS8567 Topics in Finance drawing on his experimental and market-based research on reference points and gains/losses.
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Articles
- Boumda B, Duxbury D, Ortiz C, Vicente L. . Journal of the Operational Research Society 2026, epub ahead of print.
- El Hajjar S, Gebka B, Duxbury D, Su C. . Journal of Economic Behavior and Organisation 2026, 244, 107497.
- Duxbury D, Verousis T, Marsh D. . Financial Innovation 2026, 12, 98.
- Duxbury D, Liñares-Zegarra J, Verousis T. . The European Journal of Finance 2025, Epub ahead of print.
- Duxbury D, Wang W. . European Financial Management 2024, 30(1), 496-543.
- Borsboom C, Duxbury D, Nieber A, Zeisberger S. . Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 2024, 227, 106681.
- El Hajjar S, Gebka B, Duxbury D, Su C. . Finance Research Letters 2024, 62(Part A), 105165.
- Mussio I, Chilton S, Duxbury D, Nielsen JS. . Risk Analysis 2024, 44(3), 536-552.
- Chilton S, Duxbury D, Mussio I, Nielsen JS, Sharma S. . Journal of Risk and Uncertainty 2024, 68, 1-23.
- El Hajjar S, Gebka B, Duxbury D, Su C. . British Journal of Management 2024, 35(1), 415-433.
- Wang W, Su C, Duxbury D. . Journal of Banking and Finance 2022, 138, 106458.
- Aldohni AK, Duxbury D. . Legal Studies 2022, 42(2), 246-270.
- Wang W, Su C, Duxbury D. . Journal of Empirical Finance 2021, 63, 365-391.
- Wang W, Duxbury D. . Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 2021, 191, 415-441.
- Boumda B, Duxbury D, Ortiz C, Vicente L. . Sustainability 2021, 13(15), 8142.
- Duxbury D, Gärling T, Gamble A, Klass V. . The European Journal of Finance 2020, 26(14), 1417-1438.
- Kashefi-Pour E, Amini S, Uddin M, Duxbury D. . British Journal of Management 2020, 31(3), 636-658.
- Riley C, Summers B, Duxbury D. . Management Science 2020, 66(10), 4726-4745.
- Ranyard R, McNair S, Nicolini G, Duxbury D. . Journal of Consumer Affairs 2020, 54(3), 1121-1156.
- Duxbury D, Summers B. . The European Journal of Finance 2018, 24(7-8), 521-543.
- Duxbury D, Yao S. . International Review of Financial Analysis 2017, 52, 77-87.
- Duxbury D, Hudson R, Keasey K, Yang Z, Yao S. . Journal of International Financial Markets, Institutions and Money 2015, 34, 55-68.
- Duxbury D. . Review of Behavioral Finance 2015, 7(2), 151-175.
- Duxbury D. . Review of Behavioral Finance 2015, 7(1), 78-96.
- Duxbury D, Hudson R, Keasey K, Yang Z, Yao S. . Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting 2013, 41(4), 611-629.
- Duxbury D, Summers B, Hudson R, Keasey K. . Journal of Economic Psychology 2013, 34, 256-269.
- Duxbury D. . British Accounting Review 2012, 44(3), 144-156.
- Summers B, Duxbury D. . Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 2012, 118(2), 226-238.
- Ranyard R, Bonini N, Del Missier F, Duxbury D, Summers B. . Journal of Economic Psychology 2008, 29(4), 378-400.
- Duxbury D, Moizer P, WanMohamed W. The Effects of the PricewaterhouseCoopers Merger on the UK Market for Audit Services. Managerial Auditing Journal 2007, 22(2), 121-138.
- Cai C, Duxbury D, Keasey K. A New Test of Signaling Theory. Finance Letters 2007, 5(2), 1-5.
- Summers B, Duxbury D, Hudson R, Keasey K. . Economics Letters 2006, 91(2), 210-214.
- Duxbury D, Hudson R, Keasey K, Summers B. . Economics Letters 2005, 89(1), 107-111.
- Duxbury D, Keasey K, Zhang H, Chow S. . Journal of Economic Psychology 2005, 26(4), 567-580.
- Ironfield-Smith C, Duxbury D, Keasey K, Summers B. Informed Choice for Pensions – Overcoming the Data Integration Challenge. Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance 2005, 13(3), 260-267.
- Duxbury D. Experimental Evidence on Trading Behaviour, Market Efficiency and Price Formation in Double Auctions with Unknown Trading Duration. Managerial and Decision Economics 2005, 26(8), 475-497.
- Ironfield-Smith C, Duxbury D, Hudson R, Keasey K, Summers B. . Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance 2005, 13(2), 132-141.
- Duxbury D, Summers B. Financial Risk Perception: Are individuals variance averse or loss averse?. Economics Letters 2004, 84(1), 21-28.
- Short H, Keasey K, Duxbury D. Capital Structure, Management Ownership and Large External Shareholders: A UK Analysis. International Journal of the Economics of Business 2002, 9(3), 373-396.
- Keasey K, Moon P, Duxbury D. Performance Measurement and the Use of League Tables: Some experimental evidence of dysfunctional consequences. Accounting and Business Research 2000, 30(4), 275-286.
- Moon P, Keasey K, Duxbury D. Mental Accounting and Decision Making: The relationship between relative and absolute savings. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 1999, 38, 145-153.
- Duxbury D. A Pilot Exploration of Random Period Duration in Experimental Financial Markets: A treatment variable?. Managerial and Decision Economics 1997, 18, 309-327.
- Duxbury D. Experimental Asset Markets within Finance. Journal of Economic Surveys 1995, 9(4), 331-371.
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Authored Book
- Duxbury D, Keasey K. Repeated Financial Decisions: An Experimental Analysis. John Wiley and Sons, 1999.
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Book Chapters
- Gärling T, Duxbury D. . In: Nikolaos Apergis, ed. Reference Collection in Social Sciences - Encyclopedia of Monetary Policy, Financial Markets and Banking. Elsevier, 2023.
- Duxbury D. The Effect of Trading Period Duration on Market Performance in Experimental Financial Markets. In: Andersson, F. and Holm, H, ed. Experimental Economics: Financial Markets, Auctions, and Decision Making. Interviews and Contributions from the 20th Arne Ryde Symposium. Kluwer Academic Publishers, 2002, pp.127-157.
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Confidential Report
- Duxbury D, Verousis T. . 缅北禁地/Essex University, 2019.
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Report
- Whittle R, Duxbury D, Werner K, Simister J. . Money Advice Service, 2017.