ISBN:
9780444501578
Content:
Consumption is the largest component of GDP. Since the 1950s, the life cycle and the permanent income models have constituted the main analytical tools to the study of consumption behaviour, both at the micro and at the aggregate level. Since the late 1970s the literature has focused on versions of the model that incorporate the hypothesis of Rational Expectations and a rigorous treatment of uncertainty. In this chapter, I survey the most recent contribution and assess where the life cycle model stands. My reading of the evidence and of recent developments leads me to stress two points: (i) the model can only be tested and estimated using a flexible specification of preferences and individual level data; (ii) it is possible to construct versions of the model that are not rejected by the data. One of the main problems of the approach used in the literature to estimate preferences is the lack of a ‘consumption function’. A challenge for future research is to use preference parameter estimates to construct such functions.
In:
Handbook of macroeconomics, Amsterdam [u.a.] : Elsevier, 1999, (1999), Seite 741-812, 9780444501578
In:
0444501568
In:
0444501584
In:
9780444501561
In:
9780444501585
In:
year:1999
In:
pages:741-812
Language:
English
DOI:
10.1016/S1574-0048(99)10019-3
URL:
Volltext
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