Is Consumption Growth Consistent with Intertemporal Optimization? Evidence from the Consumer Expenditure Survey
43 Pages Posted: 17 Aug 2010 Last revised: 10 Aug 2022
Date Written: July 1994
Abstract
In this paper we show that some of the predictions of models of consumer intertemporal optimization are not inconsistent with the patterns of non-durable expenditure observed in US household-level data. Our results and our approach are new in several respects. First, we use the only US micro data set which has direct and complete information on household consumption. The microeconomic data sets used in most of the consumption literature so far contained either very limited information on consumption (like the PSID) or none at all, in which case consumption had to be obtained indirectly from income and changes in assets. Second, we propose a flexible and novel specification of preferences which is easily estimable and allows a general treatment jof multiple commodities. We show that aggregation over commodities can be important, both theoretically and in practice. Third, we present empirical results that show that it is possible to find a reasonably simple specification of preferences, which controls for the effects of changes in demographics and labor supply behavior over the life cycle and which is not rejected by the available data. On our preferred specification, we obtain sharp estimates of key behavioral parameters (including the elasticity of intertemporal substitution) and no rejections of theoretical restrictions. Our results contrast sharply with most of the previous evidence, which has typically been interpreted as rejection of the theory. We show that previous rejections can be explained by the simplifying assumptions made to derive empirically tractable equations. We also show that results obtained using food consumption or aggregate data can be extremely misleading.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
An Empirical Analysis of Personal Bankruptcy and Delinquency
-
An Empirical Analysis of Personal Bankruptcy and Delinquency
-
The Sensitivity of Consumption to Transitory Income: Estimates from Panel Data on Households
-
Consumption Over the Life Cycle and Over the Business Cycle
By Orazio Attanasio and Martin Browning
-
By David Laibson, Andrea Repetto, ...
-
A Quantitative Theory of Unsecured Consumer Credit with Risk of Default
By Satyajit Chatterjee, Philip Dean Corbae, ...