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Choices of the Hand-to-Mouth-to-the-Eye

Author

Listed:
  • Mark Aguiar

    (Princeton University)

  • Corina Boar

    (Princeton University)

  • Mark Bils

    (U. of Rochester)

Abstract

The spending choices of those who consume hand-to-mouth should, conditional on in- come, be relatively routine and predictable. Based on data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics and Consumer Expenditure Surveys, we show this is not the case for households the literature has treated as most likely hand-to-mouth. Those with little wealth, or little liquid wealth, relative to income: (1) display more volatile expendi- tures, even adjusting for their income ow, (2) shift expenditures more dramatically across spending categories, (3) spend on fewer categories than other households with similar total expenditures. Based on these ndings, we entertain that such households, those ostensibly hand-to-mouth, dier in objectives from households that exhibit more savings and liquid wealth. Less diminishing returns in consuming can explain these three features of spending by low-wealth households. It can also partly explain why such households display lower savings and, especially, lower liquid savings -- that is, these households' elastic preferences yield choices that add to their appearance as hand-to- mouth.

Suggested Citation

  • Mark Aguiar & Corina Boar & Mark Bils, 2018. "Choices of the Hand-to-Mouth-to-the-Eye," 2018 Meeting Papers 273, Society for Economic Dynamics.
  • Handle: RePEc:red:sed018:273
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    Cited by:

    1. Claudio Michelacci & Andrea Pozzi & Luigi Paciello, 2018. "The extensive margin of aggregate consumption demand," 2018 Meeting Papers 1008, Society for Economic Dynamics.

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