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January 30, 2025 • 6 minutes
The scarcity mindset is the fear that there’s never enough—whether it’s money, time, or resources. In Scarcity: Why Having So Little Means So Much, Sendhil Mullainathan, a Harvard economist and winner of a MacArthur grant, and Eldar Shafir, a psychologist at Princeton University, explore how a lack of resources—whether money, time, or even social connection—impacts our thinking and decision-making. They argue that scarcity doesn’t just cause stress; it actually changes how we process information, leading to cognitive “tunnel vision” that keeps us from escaping from what we lack.
While it may seem counter intuitive, when we have very little of something, we sometimes make choices that impair that precious resource even FURTHER – often by choosing to gain some of it in the short term, which inevitably steals away even more of it in the long term.
A scarcity mindset actually reduces mental capacity, increases impulsivity, and leads to a cycle of poor decision-making.
You’re busy. There are meetings to attend, important emails unread, and looming deadlines that seemed more and more impossible with each passing day. You may feel like you have no time to yourself and are doing everything in your power to just keep your head above water.
If you would have just taken the car to the shop when you heard that first strange sound, you probably would have saved yourself some money. But more importantly, you would have saved yourself a ton of time…that resource that you were trying to gain by ignoring your car’s issues in the first place…
Let’s take a look at the key takeaways from Scarcity.
The authors’ core idea is that: Scarcity captures the mind’s attention and forces people to focus intensely on their immediate lack. This can be money, time, or even social relationships. And, when your brain is focused on what it lacks, it often neglects to move you toward decisions that get you where you actually want to be.
For example:
A better way to focus: Be grateful for what you have and put your focus on where you want to be: growing wealth, being healthy, retiring, having ease in your life.
The intense focus of a scarcity mindset can sometimes be beneficial (helping people solve urgent problems). However, it more often leads to tunnel vision, where people neglect broader, long-term goals.
The authors explain the tunneling trap, a cognitive effect where people under a scarcity mindset focus too much on immediate concerns and neglect future consequences. This leads to a cycle where people constantly solve one crisis at a time, never getting ahead financially or in other areas of life.
Scarcity narrows attention, often leading to reactive rather than proactive decision-making.
Examples:
What to do if struggling with long-term focus: Explore ideas for making your future more tangible.
Beyond making it hard to plan for the long term, a scarcity mindset reduces cognitive bandwidth—the mental resources available for problem-solving, decision-making, and impulse control.
Example:
Scarcity literally makes people less capable of making good decisions by consuming mental bandwidth.
Tips for increasing mental bandwidth: Automate as much of your decision making as possible. You can reduce cognitive load by automating financial, work, or health decisions (e.g., automatic bill payments, meal planning, etc.).
People experiencing scarcity lack slack, meaning even small shocks (a flat tire, a missed deadline) can cause major disruptions.
Without slack, people living in scarcity are far more vulnerable to setbacks.
Focusing on abundance is a great anecdote to scarcity. Planning your future is good too.
The Boldin Retirement Planner is financial planning software that helps you control your future. With this detailed detailed tool, you’ll set goals for retirement, find possibilities for achieving those goals and keep track of your progress – all ways to overcome the effects of scarcity.
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