Evaluating Risky Consumption Paths: The Role of Intertemporal Substitutability
Maurice Obstfeld
No 120, NBER Technical Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc
Abstract:
In dynamic stochastic welfare comparisons, a failure clearly to distinguish between risk aversion and intertemporal substitutability can result in misleading assessments of the impact of risk aversion on the welfare costs of consumption-risk changes. The problem arises in any setting in which uncertainty is propagated over time, notably, but not exclusively, in economies with stochastic consumption trends. Regardless of the preference setup adopted, an increase in risk aversion amplifies the per-period costs of risks. The weights consumers use to cumulate the per-period costs of risks with persistent effects should, however, depend on intertemporal substitutability as well as on risk aversion. Under time-separable expected-utility preferences, an increase in the period utility function's curvature therefore alters the welfare effect of risk for reasons that in part are unrelated to risk aversion.
JEL-codes: D58 E20 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1995-01
Note: EFG
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Published as European Economic Review, August 1994
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Journal Article: Evaluating risky consumption paths: The role of intertemporal substitutability (1994) 
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