ISSN 1671-3710
CN 11-4766/R
主办:中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理科学进展 ›› 2026, Vol. 34 ›› Issue (7): 1256-1268.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1042.2026.1256 cstr: 32111.14.2026.1256

• 研究前沿 • 上一篇    下一篇

心理预算对支出决策的约束过程和约束空间

高旭, 辛自强   

  1. 中国人民大学心理学系, 北京 100872
  • 收稿日期:2025-10-18 出版日期:2026-07-15 发布日期:2026-05-11
  • 通讯作者: 辛自强, E-mail: xinziqiang@sohu.com
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金面上项目(32471127)资助

The process and confines of mental budgeting constraints on expenditure decisions

GAO Xu, XIN Ziqiang   

  1. Department of Psychology, Renmin University of China, Beijing 100872, China
  • Received:2025-10-18 Online:2026-07-15 Published:2026-05-11

摘要: 心理预算是约束支出决策的关键因素, 区分其作用范围是评估约束效果的前提, 但现有文献尚未对其进行系统分析。为明确心理预算对支出决策的约束空间, 研究构建了包含认知标签构建、支出识别和预算参考阶段的约束过程模型。研究指出, 心理预算系统的约束范围有限、约束条件可塑:那些无法归类到预算账户、未在决策前完成识别, 以及效用高于超支边界的支出难以被心理预算约束; 决策者可能通过调整支出的归类改变预算约束条件。而且, 该系统还具备提升决策效率和收益的双重适应价值。研究完善了心理预算的理论体系, 为预算约束下的支出决策动机分析提供了新框架, 对个体预算管理、企业营销及公共政策制定具有参考价值。

关键词: 心理预算, 约束空间, 认知标签化, 支出决策, 心理账户

Abstract: Mental budgeting, a core component of mental accounting theory, refers to the cognitive process by which individuals allocate funds to specific mental accounts and track expenditures against these budgets. Although existing research has demonstrated that mental budgeting can constrain spending, the specific conditions under which such constraints succeed or fail require further theoretical exploration. To address this question, this paper proposes a constraint process model that delineates the cognitive mechanisms through which mental budgeting influences expenditure decisions and defines the boundaries within which it operates.
The model consists of three sequential cognitive stages: cognitive labeling, expense identification, and budgetary reference. In the first stage, individuals assign cognitive labels to funds based on anticipated uses, thereby creating nonfungible mental accounts. This labeling process, rooted in basic human categorization, establishes the structural foundation for budget constraints. In the second stage, an expense must be noticed and matched to a preexisting mental account. If the expense is too small, too urgent, or otherwise fails to capture attention before the decision is made, it may escape budgetary scrutiny. In the third stage, once an expense is identified, the individual compares its utility against the remaining budget. If the perceived utility is sufficiently high, the decision may prioritize gain seeking over budget adherence, leading to intentional overspending.
The model identifies three key boundary conditions that define the constraining confines of mental budgeting. The first is categorizability, which refers to whether an expense can be assigned to a mental account. The second is timing of identification, meaning whether the expense is recognized before or after the decision. The third is utility level, which concerns whether the perceived utility of the expense surpasses a threshold that triggers utility driven overspending. These conditions collectively determine whether an expense will be constrained by mental budgeting. The model thus helps explain why some expenditures, such as exceptional or low-cost items, are more likely to bypass budgetary control, and why individuals may strategically reclassify ambiguous expenses to alter their budget constraints.
The model also addresses a theoretical tension in mental accounting research between the nonfungibility of mental accounts and the flexibility of expense categorization. By situating these phenomena in different cognitive stages: nonfungibility in the labeling stage and flexible categorization in the identification stage. This paper suggests that they are not contradictory but rather complementary mechanisms that together shape expenditure outcomes. This perspective advances the theoretical understanding of mental accounting and provides a more nuanced framework for analyzing consumer decision making under budget constraints.
Beyond delineating constraints, this paper explores the adaptive value of mental budgeting. The system enhances decision efficiency in two ways. For identified expenses, it simplifies choice by providing budget references. For low stakes or urgent expenses, it allows for rapid decision making by bypassing elaborate deliberation. Furthermore, mental budgeting helps reconcile long-term and short-term benefits. The labeling and tracking mechanisms support future oriented goals, such as saving for significant purchases, while flexible categorization and post identification overspending enable individuals to pursue high utility opportunities without entirely abandoning the budget framework. This dual function perspective positions mental budgeting as a resource rational adaptation rather than merely a cognitive limitation.
The paper concludes by suggesting directions for future research. Empirical validation of the model is needed across diverse contexts, using experimental paradigms that manipulate categorizability, identification timing, and utility levels. Neuroimaging techniques could further illuminate the neural correlates of the proposed stages, particularly the role of cognitive control regions in budget adherence versus overspending. Practical implications are discussed for consumer financial tools, marketing strategies, and public policy, highlighting how interventions might leverage the model's insights to promote adaptive financial behavior.
By specifying the cognitive processes and boundary conditions that govern mental budgeting, this paper offers a comprehensive theoretical account of how and when budgets shape spending decisions. It provides a foundation for future research at the intersection of cognitive psychology, behavioral economics, and consumer science.

Key words: mental budgeting, constraining confines, cognitive labeling, expenditure decisions, mental accounting

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