Dynamics of Wealth and Consumption: New and Improved Measures for U.S. States
-
Xia Zhou
und Christopher D. Carroll
Case, Quigley, and Shiller (2005) persuasively argue that the well-known conceptual difficulties in measuring aggregate “wealth effects” might be lessened by the use of state-level data. Unfortunately, the data required for a convincing implementation of their idea have been either virtually nonexistent (for financial wealth) or of questionable quality (for consumption). Our main contributions are to provide the first directly observed panel data on financial wealth at the state level, and to construct improved measures of state-level spending growth. Using these data, we estimate rudimentary “wealth effects” regressions that find a strong relationship between twice-lagged housing wealth growth and current spending growth, but we find no relationship between lagged financial wealth growth and current spending growth.
©2012 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Advances Article
- Empirical Macroeconomics Using Geographical Data: Guest Editors' Introduction
- Fiscal Policy Cyclicality and Growth within the US States
- The Local Effects of Monetary Policy
- Dynamics of Wealth and Consumption: New and Improved Measures for U.S. States
- Banking Conditions and the Effects of Monetary Policy: Evidence from U.S. States
- Interstate Banking Deregulation and Bank Loan Commitments
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Advances Article
- Empirical Macroeconomics Using Geographical Data: Guest Editors' Introduction
- Fiscal Policy Cyclicality and Growth within the US States
- The Local Effects of Monetary Policy
- Dynamics of Wealth and Consumption: New and Improved Measures for U.S. States
- Banking Conditions and the Effects of Monetary Policy: Evidence from U.S. States
- Interstate Banking Deregulation and Bank Loan Commitments