Hand-to-Mouth Consumers and Asset Prices
Philippe Weil
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Abstract:
Many consumers seem to lead a hand-to-mouth existence: they simplyconsume their current income. This may be the result of unsophisticatedbehavior (non-optimizing, or ‘rule-of-thumb' consumers), or the reflection ofan inability to trade in asset markets due to infinite transactions costs. Theobjective of this paper is to explore, in a very simple model, the implicationsfor equilibrium asset prices of the presence of hand-to-mouth consumers. Iwill establish that allowing for the existence of hand-to-mouth consumerscontributes, under plausible assumptions, to the resolution of the equitypremium puzzle' and of the riskfree rate puzzle. As a consequence, thesame phenomenon - hand-to-mouth consumption - which Campbell andMankiw (1989) have shown to be crucial to the description of the time-seriesbehavior of aggregate consumption has the potential of explaining assetmarket data (...).
Date: 1992-04
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (13)
Published in European Economic Review, 1992, 36 (2-3), pp.575 - 583. ⟨10.1016/0014-2921(92)90115-D⟩
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Journal Article: Hand-to-mouth consumers and asset prices (1992) 
Working Paper: Hand-to-Mouth Consumers and Asset Prices (1992)
Working Paper: Hand-to-Mouth Consumers and Asset Prices (1991)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:hal:journl:hal-03393469
DOI: 10.1016/0014-2921(92)90115-D
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