CREDIT CONSTRAINTS, LEARNING, AND AGGREGATE CONSUMPTION VOLATILITY

Daniel L. Tortorice
2012 Macroeconomic Dynamics  
This paper documents three empirical facts. First, the volatility of consumption growth relative to income growth rose from 1947-1960 and then fell dramatically by 50 percent from the 1960s to the 1990s. Second, the correlation between consumption growth and personal income growth fell by about 50 percent over the same time period. Finally, the absolute deviation of consumption growth from its mean exhibits one break in U.S. data, and the mean of the absolute deviations has fallen by about 30
more » ... rcent. First, I ...nd that a standard dynamic, stochastic general equilibrium model is unable to explain these facts. Then, I examine the ability of two hypotheses: a fall in credit constraints and changing beliefs about the permanence of income shocks to account for these facts. I ...nd evidence for both explanations and the beliefs explanation is more consistent with the data. Importantly, I ...nd that estimated changes in beliefs about the permanence of income shocks have signi...cant explanatory power for consumption changes. JEL Codes: E21, E32, D83
doi:10.1017/s1365100512000417 fatcat:f4hnkxztvvg5zi2lpaboh3smsi