Climate Change and Households' Risk-Taking
68 Pages Posted: 24 Mar 2022 Last revised: 21 Nov 2022
Date Written: November 17, 2022
Abstract
This paper studies a novel channel through which climate risks affect households’ choices of risky asset allocation: a stringent climate change regulation elevates labor income risk for households employed by high-emission industries which in turn discourages households' financial risk-taking. Using staggered adoptions of climate change action plans across states, we find that climate change action plans lead to a reduction in the share of risky assets by 15% for households in high-emission industries. We also find a reduction in risky asset holdings after the stringent EPA regulation. These results are stronger with experiences of climate change-related disasters. Our study implies an unintended consequence of climate regulations for wealth inequality by discouraging low-wealth households' financial risk-taking.
Keywords: Climate change regulation, EPA, Natural disaster, Portfolio choices, Household stock market participation
JEL Classification: D14, G11, G18, G51, Q54
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