Income Variance Dynamics and Heterogeneity
40 Pages Posted: 6 Dec 2002
Date Written: November 2002
Abstract
Recent theoretical work has shown the importance of measuring microeconomic uncertainty for models of both general and partial equilibrium under imperfect insurance. In this Paper the assumption of i.i.d. income innovations used in previous empirical studies is removed and the focus of the analysis placed on models for the conditional variance of income shocks, which is related to the measure of risk emphasized by the theory. We first discriminate amongst various models of earnings determination that separate income shocks into idiosyncratic transitory and permanent components. We allow for education- and time-specific differences in the stochastic process for earnings and for measurement error. The conditional variance of the income shocks is modelled as a parsimonious ARCH process with both observable and unobserved heterogeneity. The empirical analysis is conducted on data drawn from the 1967-92 Panel Study of Income Dynamics. We find strong evidence of sizeable ARCH effects as well as evidence of unobserved heterogeneity in the variances.
Keywords: Microeconomic uncertainty, ARCH, earnings
JEL Classification: D80, J30
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Relative Wage Movements and the Distribution of Consumption
By Orazio Attanasio and Stephen J. Davis
-
Consumption and Risk Sharing Over the Life Cycle
By Kjetil Storesletten, Chris Telmer, ...
-
Intertemporal Choice and Inequality
By Angus Deaton and Christina Paxon
-
Partial Insurance, Information, and Consumption Dynamics
By Richard W. Blundell, Luigi Pistaferri, ...
-
Does Income Inequality Lead to Consumption Inequality? Evidence and Theory
By Dirk Krueger and Fabrizio Perri
-
Does Income Inequality Lead to Consumption Inequality? Evidence and Theory
By Dirk Krueger and Fabrizio Perri
-
Does Income Inequality Lead to Consumption Inequality? Evidence and Theory
By Dirk Krueger and Fabrizio Perri
-
Rising Inequality? Changes in the Distribution of Income and Consumption in the 1980s
By David M. Cutler and Lawrence F. Katz
-
The Macroeconomic Implications of Rising Wage Inequality in the United States
By Jonathan Heathcote, Kjetil Storesletten, ...
-
Private Insurance Markets or Redistributive Taxes?
By Dirk Krueger and Fabrizio Perri