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Relative Wage Movements and the Distribution of Consumption

474

Citations

15

References

1996

Year

TLDR

The study examines how cohort‑ and education‑based wage changes influence household consumption distribution and welfare. Using synthetic panel data from 1980s U.S. cross‑sectional surveys, the authors analyze consumption, labor supply, and wages.

Abstract

We analyze how relative wage movements among birth cohorts and education groups affected the distribution of household consumption and economic welfare. Our empirical work draws on the best available cross-sectional data sets to construct synthetic panel data on U.S. consumption, labor supply, and wages during the 1980s. We find that low-frequency movements in the cohort-education structure of pretax hourly wages among men drove large changes in the distribution of household consumption. The results constitute a spectacular failure of between-group consumption insurance, a failure not explained by existing theories of informationally constrained optimal consumption behavior. A welfare analysis indicates that the cost of between-group consumption variability is larger than the cost of aggregate consumption variability by two orders of magnitude.

References

YearCitations

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