We remove the aggregate US-wide component in US state level disposable income and consumption and find that state-specific consumption exhibits substantially less excess sensitivity to lagged state-specific disposable income than if the aggregate component is not controlled for. This is evidence that excess sensitivity of consumption in aggregate US data is driven to a large extent by US-wide effects since, in the aggregate, US net imports and investment do not adjust quickly to fluctuations in consumption demand. Ordering states by the persistence of income shocks, we find that removal of the aggregate component from the state level data reduces excess sensitivity for all states by the same amount and that the excess sensitivity of consump...
This thesis investigates some contemporary issues in consumption using household data. It exploits s...
We examine a model that generalizes the standard buffer-stock model of saving to accommodate durable...
While real incomes in the lower and middle portions of the U.S. income distribution have only risen ...
State-level consumption exhibits excess sensitivity to lagged income to the same extent as US aggreg...
This paper documents that region-level consumption exhibits excess sensitivity to lagged region-leve...
If some consumers are liquidity-constrained, aggregate consumption should be 'excessively sensitive'...
If some consumers are liquidity-constrained, aggregate consumption should be ‘excessively sensitive’...
Using a newly created panel dataset at the provincial level in China, this article revisits the hypo...
This paper documents three empirical facts. First, consumption volatility relative to income volatil...
This paper investigates whether there is time variation in the excess sensitivity of aggregate consu...
The excess smoothness puzzle is explored using a simple version of the permanent income hypothesis. ...
Deaton's (1987) "excess smoothness" question can be reformulated by focusing attention on total inco...
The excess smoothness puzzle is explored using a simple version of the permanent income hypothesis. ...
Individual income is much more variable than aggregate per capita income. I argue that aggregate inf...
This paper examines the link between income inequality and consumption inequality through the degree...
This thesis investigates some contemporary issues in consumption using household data. It exploits s...
We examine a model that generalizes the standard buffer-stock model of saving to accommodate durable...
While real incomes in the lower and middle portions of the U.S. income distribution have only risen ...
State-level consumption exhibits excess sensitivity to lagged income to the same extent as US aggreg...
This paper documents that region-level consumption exhibits excess sensitivity to lagged region-leve...
If some consumers are liquidity-constrained, aggregate consumption should be 'excessively sensitive'...
If some consumers are liquidity-constrained, aggregate consumption should be ‘excessively sensitive’...
Using a newly created panel dataset at the provincial level in China, this article revisits the hypo...
This paper documents three empirical facts. First, consumption volatility relative to income volatil...
This paper investigates whether there is time variation in the excess sensitivity of aggregate consu...
The excess smoothness puzzle is explored using a simple version of the permanent income hypothesis. ...
Deaton's (1987) "excess smoothness" question can be reformulated by focusing attention on total inco...
The excess smoothness puzzle is explored using a simple version of the permanent income hypothesis. ...
Individual income is much more variable than aggregate per capita income. I argue that aggregate inf...
This paper examines the link between income inequality and consumption inequality through the degree...
This thesis investigates some contemporary issues in consumption using household data. It exploits s...
We examine a model that generalizes the standard buffer-stock model of saving to accommodate durable...
While real incomes in the lower and middle portions of the U.S. income distribution have only risen ...