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Habit Persistence and Durability in Aggregate Consumption: Empirical Tests
George M. Constantinides University of Chicago - Graduate School of Business; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) Wayne E. Ferson University of Southern California; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) March 1992 NBER Working Paper No. W3631 Abstract: Habit persistence in consumption preferences and durability of consumption goods are two hypotheses which imply time-nonseparability in the derived utility for consumption expenditures. We study a simple model with both effect, in which lagged consumption expenditures enter the Euler equation. Habit persistence implies that the coefficients on the lagged expenditures are negative, while durability implies positive coefficients. If both effects are present, then estimating the sign of the coefficients addresses the question as to which of the two effects is dominant. Earlier empirical work on monthly data supported the durability of consumption expenditures. We estimate and test the Euler equation using monthly, quarterly and annual data and find evidence that habit persistence dominates the effect of durability.
JEL Classifications: 31 Working Paper SeriesDate posted: May 21, 2004 ; Last revised: May 21, 2004Suggested CitationContact Information
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