Quantifying Expenditure Hierarchies and the Expansion of Global Consumption Diversity
Andreas Chai,
Elena Stepanova and
Alessio Moneta
LEM Papers Series from Laboratory of Economics and Management (LEM), Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies, Pisa, Italy
Abstract:
Economic growth tends to stimulate fundamental changes in consumption patterns as consumers who get rich tend to spread their spending more evenly across a wider variety of goods and services. Comparing cross sectional spending patterns across rich and poor countries, we investigate how this diversification process enables more niche patterns of spending to emerge across the global population of consumers. We use entropy measures to quantify the dispersion of household spending across goods and study how it unfolds as GDP rises. Using a gravity model to study international differences in the relative order of income elasticities, i.e. expenditure hierarchies, we show how this diversification process on the national level is correlated with cultural norms, GDP and income inequality. We find that national expenditure hi- erarchies are relatively similar across countries among necessities, while they are increasingly unique among luxuries. We further verify how rising affluence tends to generate more niche consumption patterns by examining how rising income is positively correlated with demand heterogeneity and income inequality is negatively correlated with market depth.
Keywords: Spending diversity; economic development; income elasticity; economic complexity. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2022-10-02
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-gro and nep-hme
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Journal Article: Quantifying expenditure hierarchies and the expansion of global consumption diversity (2023) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:ssa:lemwps:2022/29
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