![]() |
|
|
|
|
|
AREC Home |
|
| Stability
of U.S. Consumption Expenditure Patterns: 1996–1999 Lester D. Taylor |
|
| [download paper] [research papers listings] | |
| Abstract | |
| A
cornerstone of macroeconomic analysis since publication of Keynes’s
General Theory in 1936 has been a strong belief in a stable aggregate
consumption function. At a micro level, there has been an equally strong
belief in invariant individual tastes and preferences. The usual approach
in testing for structural stability is to examine consumption, expenditure,
or demand functions estimated over different time periods for evidence
of changes in marginal propensities to consume, price and income elasticities,
and other parameters. This paper takes a different approach. Rather than
analyzing stability (or its absence) in terms of invariance in behavioral
parameters (i.e., the coefficients in consumption, demand, or Engel functions),
the focus is on direct relationships amongst exhaustive categories of
U. S. consumption expenditure, using household expenditure information
from the on-going quarterly BLS Consumer Expenditure Surveys. Sixteen
quarters of data for 1996 through 1999 are analyzed. The results provide
strong empirical evidence in support of structural stability in underlying
consumption relationships that account for about 85 percent of the variation
in U. S. consumer expenditure. Some (speculative) thoughts relating this
structural stability to common underlying cultural and genetic factors
are offered in conclusion. |
|
|
|
|
© 2007 Dept. of Agricultural & Resource Economics, The University of Arizona
Send comments or questions to arecweb@ag.arizona.edu
Last updated November 10, 2004
Document located at http://ag.arizona.edu/arec/pubs/researchpapers/abstract2004-18.html