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Household Saving, Class Identity, and Conspicuous Consumption

Jon D. Wisman ()

Journal of Economic Issues, 2009, vol. XLIII, issue 1, pages 89-114

Abstract: The saving rate for U.S. households has long been low relative to those in other wealthy countries and in recent decades this rate has plummeted. Most studies of household saving behavior are based on the life-cycle theory of saving. However, there is doubt as to whether these studies adequately explain the low and declining rate in the United States. This study explores two hypotheses that depart from the life-cycle explanatory framework. The first hypothesis examines the possibility that the low rate of household saving in the United States is related to Americans' strong belief that vertical mobility in the United States is readily possible and hence their relatively weak sense of class identity. A second corollary hypothesis is that in an economy in which a high degree of vertical mobility is thought possible, a high degree of inequality in the distribution of income and wealth may reinforce the tendency to save little.

Keywords: vertical mobility; inequality; life-cycle hypothesis; social status; American exceptionalism (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2009

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