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Human Capital Risk and Limited Commitment

Author

Listed:
  • Mark Wright

    (UCLA)

  • Tom Krebs

    (Mannheim University)

Abstract

This paper analyzes a general equilibrium model with limited commitment and production. There are a large number of infinitely-lived, risk-averse agents who invest in physical and human capital, and production exhibits constant-returns-to-scale with respect to these two input factors. Preferences allow for a time-additive expected utility representation with constant relative risk aversion. There is a government that can insure agents against idiosyncratic human capital risk subject to a sequential participation constraint. For a general Markov process over idiosyncratic and aggregate shocks, we show that simple recursive equilibria exist and provide a general characterization of these equilibria. In equilibrium, the participation constraint i) may bind for agents receiving a negative labor income (human capital) shock and ii) the participation constraint either binds for all wealth levels or does not bind at all. For a calibrated version of the model economy, human capital risk generates substantial consumption volatility and has significant welfare consequences.

Suggested Citation

  • Mark Wright & Tom Krebs, 2008. "Human Capital Risk and Limited Commitment," 2008 Meeting Papers 325, Society for Economic Dynamics.
  • Handle: RePEc:red:sed008:325
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