The Role of Consumption in Economic Fluctuations
Robert Hall (rehall@stanford.edu)
No 1391, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc
Abstract:
Consumption and income tend to move together; the correlation of their first differences is about 0.14. In most accounts, the correlation is attributed to the upward slope of the consumption function. When the publicis better off, they consume more. But in the microeconomic theory of the household, income is a variable chosen by the household. Choosing to workmore, and therefore to consume less time away from work, is a sign of diminished well being.The structural relation between earnings and consumption should have a negative slope.The explanation of the observed positive correlation of consumption and income must rest on shifts of the consumption-income relation, not movements along it. An examination of data for the U.S. in the twentieth century shows that the slope of the consumption-income relation has been approximately zero. Shifts in consumer behavior explain the positive observed correlation; they are an important, but not dominant, source of overall fluctuations in the aggregate economy.
Date: 1984-06
Note: EFG
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Published as Hall, Robert E. "The Role of Consumption in Economic Fluctuations." The American Business Cycle: Continuity and Change, edited by Robert J. Gordon. Chicago: UCP, 1986, pp. 237-255 and 265-266.
Published as The Role of Consumption in Economic Fluctuations , Robert E. Hall. in The American Business Cycle: Continuity and Change , Gordon. 1986
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Chapter: The Role of Consumption in Economic Fluctuations (1986) 
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