NBER Publications by John Sabelhaus
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Books
Improving the Measurement of Consumer Expenditures
with Christopher Carroll, Thomas Crossley
Conference held December 2-3, 2011
Forthcoming from University of Chicago Press
in NBER Book Series Studies in Income and Wealth
Working Papers and Chapters
| April 2012 | Is the Consumer Expenditure Survey Representative by Income?
with David Johnson, Stephen Ash, David Swanson, Thesia Garner, John Greenlees, Steve Henderson
in Improving the Measurement of Consumer Expenditures, Christopher Carroll, Thomas Crossley, and John Sabelhaus, editors
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| December 2011 | Introduction to "Improving the Measurement of Consumer Expenditures"
with Christopher Carroll, Thomas Crossley
in Improving the Measurement of Consumer Expenditures, Christopher Carroll, Thomas Crossley, and John Sabelhaus, editors
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| May 1996 | Understanding the Postwar Decline in U.S. Saving: A Cohort Analysis
with Jagadeesh Gokhale, Laurence J. Kotlikoff: w5571
Since 1980, the U.S. net national saving rate has averaged less than half the rate observed in the 1950s and 60s. This paper develops a unique cohort data set to study the decline in U.S. national saving. It decomposes postwar changes in U.S. saving into those due to changes in cohort-specific consumption propensities, those due to changes in the intergenerational distribution of resources, those due to changes in government spending on goods and services, and those due to changes in demographics. Our findings are striking. The decline in U.S. saving can be traced to two factors: The redistribution of resources from young and unborn generations with low or zero propensities to consume toward older generations with high consumption propensities, and a significant increase in the consumpti... |
| April 1995 | The Annuitization of Americans' Resources: A Cohort Analysis
with Alan J. Auerbach, Jagadeesh Gokhale, Laurence J. Kotlikoff, David N. Weil: w5089
This paper constructs a unique cohort data set to study the changes since 1960 in the share of Americans' resources that are annuitized. Understanding these changes is important because the larger this share, the more cohorts are likely to consume and the less they are likely to bequeath. Hence, the degree of annuitization affects national saving as well as the transmission of inequality over time. Our findings are striking. Although the annuitized share of resources of younger Americans declined slightly between 1960 and 1990, it increased dramatically for older Americans. It doubled for older men and quadrupled for older women. Since the elderly have much higher mortality probabilities than do the young, their degree of annuitization is much more important for aggregate bequests and... |
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