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Estimating Discount Functions with Consumption Choices over the Lifecycle

David Laibson, Andrea Repetto () and Jeremy Tobacman

No 236, Documentos de Trabajo from Centro de Economía Aplicada, Universidad de Chile

Abstract: Intertemporal preferences are difficult to measure. We estimate time preferences using a structural buffer stock consumption model and the Method of Simulated Moments. The model includes stochastic labor income, liquidity constraints, child and adult dependents, liquid and illiquid assets, revolving credit, retirement, and discount functions that allow short-run and long-run discount rates to differ. Data on retirement wealth accumulation, credit card borrowing, and consumption-income comovement identify the model. Our benchmark estimates imply a 40% short-term annualized discount rate and a 4.3% long-term annualized discount rate. Almost all specifications reject the restriction to a constant discount rate. Our quantitative results are sensitive to assumptions about the return on illiquid assets and the coefficient of relative risk aversion. When we jointly estimate the coefficient of relative risk aversion and the discount function, the short-term discount rate is 15% and the long-term discount rate is 3.8%. JEL classi.cation: D91 (Intertemporal Consumer Choice; Lifecycle Models and Saving), E21 (Consumption; Saving).

Date: 2007
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-mac
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (209)

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Related works:
Working Paper: Estimating Discount Functions with Consumption Choices over the Lifecycle (2007) Downloads
Working Paper: Estimating Discount Functions with Consumption Choices over the Lifecycle (2007) Downloads
Working Paper: Estimating Discount Functions with Consumption Choices over the Lifecycle (2005) Downloads
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