Using Subjective Income Expectations to Test for Excess Sensitivity of Consumption to Predicted Income Growth

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP1617

Authors: Tullio Jappelli; Luigi Pistaferri

Abstract: We test for excess sensitivity of consumption to predicted income growth using a 1989?93 panel survey of Italian households that includes measures of subjective income and inflation expectations. These expectations provide a powerful instrument for predicting income growth. Controlling for the expected variance of consumption growth and for predictable changes in labour supply, we find that household consumption growth is very strongly correlated with predicted earnings growth of the head. We also find considerable evidence that excess sensitivity is due to liquidity constraints. Our strongest result is that in a sample of low-asset households the coefficient of expected income increases is one, while that of expected income declines is zero.

Keywords: Euler equations; excess sensitivity; subjective expectations

JEL Codes: E21


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
subjective income expectations (D12)household consumption growth (D10)
predicted earnings growth of the head (O40)household consumption growth (D10)
expected income increases (E25)household consumption growth (D10)
expected income decreases (E25)household consumption growth (D10)
consumption risk (D11)household consumption growth (D10)

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