Home production and the allocation of time and consumption over the life cycle
Joppe de Ree and
Rob Alessie
No 08-17, Working Papers from Utrecht School of Economics
Abstract:
This paper estimates a model of female time allocation and non-durable consumption in an intertemporal utility maximization framework. We are using rather extensive but relatively unexploited series of repeated cross sections from the Dutch B.O. consumer expenditure survey from Statistics Netherlands (1978- 2000). As male labor supply is known to respond rather inelastically to wage changes –perhaps due to restrictions on the labor market– we condition on male labor supply in the analysis. We specify assumptions on domestic production technology that allows us to estimate labor supply elasticities that are consistent with non-separable preferences over consumption, leisure and a non-marketable domestically produced good, without the explicit use of time-use data. We find that when intertemporal re-allocation of resources is taken into account female labor supply elasticities increase about 50% in size relative to what we find in a static framework (1.1 to about 1.7). Furthermore, we identify parameters of intertemporal allocation on a log linearized Euler equation using a synthetic panel with a large T dimension. The intertemporal allocation parameter is of reasonable size, but is imprecisely estimated. Moreover, we find that current income is a significant predictor for consumption growth (conditional on demographics). This could be interpreted as evidence against the validity of our version of the life cycle model. We do however offer a number of different explanations for this finding.
Keywords: Life Cycle models; female labor supply; synthetic panel data; Euler equation (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2008-07
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dge and nep-lab
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