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Consumption Smoothing in Metropolis: Evidence from the Working-class Households in Prewar Tokyo

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  • Kota Ogasawara

Abstract

I analyze the risk-coping behaviors among factory worker households in early 20th-century Tokyo. I digitize a unique daily longitudinal survey dataset on household budgets to examine the extent to which consumption is affected by idiosyncratic shocks. I find that while the households were so vulnerable that the shocks impacted their consumption levels, the income elasticity for food consumption is relatively low in the short-run perspective. The result from mechanism analysis suggests that credit purchases with local retailers played a role in smoothing short-run food consumption. The event-study analysis using the adverse health shock as the idiosyncratic income shock confirms the robustness of the results. I also find evidence that the misassignment of payday in data aggregation results in a systematic attenuation bias due to measurement error in the standard consumption smoothing regressions.

Suggested Citation

  • Kota Ogasawara, 2023. "Consumption Smoothing in Metropolis: Evidence from the Working-class Households in Prewar Tokyo," Papers 2311.14320, arXiv.org, revised Feb 2024.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2311.14320
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    References listed on IDEAS

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