NBER Publications by Guglielmo Weber
Working Papers and Chapters
| September 2006 | Saving and Cohabitation: The Economic Consequences of Living with One's Parents in Italy and the Netherlands
with Rob Alessie, Agar Brugiavini
in NBER International Seminar on Macroeconomics 2004, Richard H. Clarida, Jeffrey Frankel, Francesco Giavazzi and Kenneth D. West, editors
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| November 1995 | Humps and Bumps in Lifetime Consumption
with Orazio P. Attanasio, James Banks, Costas Meghir: w5350
In this paper we argue that once one departs from the simple classroom example, or `stripped down life-cycle model,' the empirical model for consumption growth can be made flexible enough to fit the main features of the data. More specifically, we show that allowing demographics to affect household preferences and relaxing the assumption of certainty equivalence can generate hump-shaped consumption profiles over age that are very similar to those observed in household-level data sources, without appealing to alternative explanations (such as liquidity constraints, myopia or mental accounting). The hump-shape is partly attributable to precautionary savings, and partly due to demographics; the tracking (whereby consumption jumps with income) is instead due to the permanent nature of the in... |
| July 1994 | Is Consumption Growth Consistent with Intertemporal Optimization? Evidence from the Consumer Expenditure Survey
with Orazio P. Attanasio: w4795
In this paper we show that some of the predictions of models of consumer intertemporal optimization are not inconsistent with the patterns of non-durable expenditure observed in US household-level data. Our results and our approach are new in several respects. First, we use the only US micro data set which has direct and complete information on household consumption. The microeconomic data sets used in most of the consumption literature so far contained either very limited information on consumption (like the PSID) or none at all, in which case consumption had to be obtained indirectly from income and changes in assets. Second, we propose a flexible and novel specification of preferences which is easily estimable and allows a general treatment jof multiple commodities. We show that aggr... |
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