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The First of the Month Effect: Consumer Behavior and Store Responses

Justine Hastings and Ebonya L. Washington

No 14578, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc

Abstract: Previous research has used survey and diary data to carefully document that Food Stamp recipients decrease their expenditures and consumption of food throughout the benefit month, the beginning of which is defined by the date on which benefits are distributed. The reliance on survey and diary data has meant that researchers could not test two rational hypotheses for why food consumption cycles. Using detailed grocery store scanner data we ask 1) whether cycling is due to a desire for variation in foods consumed that leads to substitution across product quality within the month and 2) whether cycling is driven by countercyclical pricing by grocery retailers. We find support for neither of these hypotheses. We find that the decrease in food expenditures is largely driven by reductions in food quantity, not quality, and that prices for foods purchased by benefit households vary pro-cyclically with demand implying that benefit households could save money by delaying their food purchases until later in the month. The price effects are small relative to demand changes and relative to impacts found for other subsidy programs such as EITC, suggesting that most of the benefits accrue to the intended recipients particularly in product categories and stores where benefit recipients represent a small fraction of overall demand. We conclude by concurring with previous literature that food cycling behavior is most likely due to short-run impatience.

JEL-codes: H0 H2 H31 H32 L1 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2008-12
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-mkt
Note: IO PE
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Published as Justine Hastings & Ebonya Washington, 2010. "The First of the Month Effect: Consumer Behavior and Store Responses," American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, American Economic Association, vol. 2(2), pages 142-62, May.
Published as The First of the Month Effect: Consumer Behavior and Store Responses , Justine Hastings, Ebonya Washington. in Income Taxation, Trans-Atlantic Public Economics Seminar (TAPES) , Gordon and Piketty. 2010

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Chapter: The First of the Month Effect: Consumer Behavior and Store Responses (2010)
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