The wealth distribution in the U.S. is more unequal, or skewed to the right, than either the income or earnings distribution, a fact current models of saving behavior have difficulty explaining. Using Max Weber's (1905) idea that individuals may have a `capitalist spirit', I construct and simulate a model where some individuals accumulate wealth for its own sake rather than as deferred consumption. Including capitalist-spirit preferences in the standard life cycle model, with no other modifications, generates a skewness of wealth consistent with that observed in the U.S. economy. Furthermore, capitalist-spirit preferences provide a way to generate decreasing risk aversion with increases in wealth without resorting to idiosyncratic rates of ...
In this paper I present an explanation to the fact that in the data wealth is substantially more con...
With regard to its outward manifestations, the American variant of capitalism seems healthy and vibr...
This paper examines how a preference for robustness affects optimal consumption-portfolio rules as w...
The wealth distribution in the U.S. is more unequal, or skewed to the right, than either the income ...
The wealth distribution in the U.S. is more unequal, or skewed to the right, than either the income ...
Standard economic theories of asset markets assume that assets are valued entirely for the consumpti...
This paper presents a capitalist-spirit model of savings by including wealth in the intertemporal ut...
The aim of the study is to investigate the influence of the capitalist spirit in conjunction with th...
We calibrate a sequence of four nested models to study the dynamics of wealth accumulation. Individu...
A central question of economics has been: how do we explain the distribution of income among factors...
We calibrate a sequence of four nested models to study the dynamics of wealth accumulation. Individu...
This paper tests the consumption‐based capital asset model within the context of the spirit of capit...
We extend and test two models of aggregate asset pricing that feature status-seeking through accumul...
Data suggest the distribution of wealth among households in the United States and the United Kingdom...
In the United States, the employment rate is nearly flat across wealth quintiles with the exception...
In this paper I present an explanation to the fact that in the data wealth is substantially more con...
With regard to its outward manifestations, the American variant of capitalism seems healthy and vibr...
This paper examines how a preference for robustness affects optimal consumption-portfolio rules as w...
The wealth distribution in the U.S. is more unequal, or skewed to the right, than either the income ...
The wealth distribution in the U.S. is more unequal, or skewed to the right, than either the income ...
Standard economic theories of asset markets assume that assets are valued entirely for the consumpti...
This paper presents a capitalist-spirit model of savings by including wealth in the intertemporal ut...
The aim of the study is to investigate the influence of the capitalist spirit in conjunction with th...
We calibrate a sequence of four nested models to study the dynamics of wealth accumulation. Individu...
A central question of economics has been: how do we explain the distribution of income among factors...
We calibrate a sequence of four nested models to study the dynamics of wealth accumulation. Individu...
This paper tests the consumption‐based capital asset model within the context of the spirit of capit...
We extend and test two models of aggregate asset pricing that feature status-seeking through accumul...
Data suggest the distribution of wealth among households in the United States and the United Kingdom...
In the United States, the employment rate is nearly flat across wealth quintiles with the exception...
In this paper I present an explanation to the fact that in the data wealth is substantially more con...
With regard to its outward manifestations, the American variant of capitalism seems healthy and vibr...
This paper examines how a preference for robustness affects optimal consumption-portfolio rules as w...