Pages that link to "Item:Q3594926"
From MaRDI portal
The following pages link to Does Income Inequality Lead to Consumption Inequality? Evidence and Theory1 (Q3594926):
Displaying 38 items.
- Consumer default with complete markets: default-based pricing and finite punishment (Q403709) (← links)
- Income risk, macroeconomic and demographic change, and economic inequality in Japan (Q428017) (← links)
- Indeterminacy in stochastic overlapping generations models: real effects in the long run (Q513602) (← links)
- Introduction to incompleteness and uncertainty in economics (Q548229) (← links)
- Public versus private risk sharing (Q548244) (← links)
- Crowding out and crowding in: when does redistribution improve risk-sharing in limited commitment economies? (Q548246) (← links)
- Optimal risk sharing and borrowing constraints in a continuous-time model with limited commitment (Q654513) (← links)
- Does the profile of income inequality matter for economic growth? (Q814994) (← links)
- Inequality and growth: some welfare calculations (Q844683) (← links)
- Why have business cycle fluctuations become less volatile? (Q883088) (← links)
- A duality approach to continuous-time contracting problems with limited commitment (Q900606) (← links)
- Endogenous trading constraints with incomplete asset markets (Q972868) (← links)
- How important is discount rate heterogeneity for wealth inequality? (Q1027408) (← links)
- How does the sensitivity of consumption to income vary over time? International evidence (Q1656435) (← links)
- The age-specific burdens of short-run fluctuations in government spending (Q1657304) (← links)
- Public versus private provision of liquidity: is there a trade-off? (Q1657601) (← links)
- Rational inattention and the dynamics of consumption and wealth in general equilibrium (Q1676455) (← links)
- Revisiting the effect of household size on consumption over the life-cycle (Q1994220) (← links)
- Does risk sharing increase with risk aversion and risk when commitment is limited? (Q1994632) (← links)
- Income inequality, consumption, credit and credit risk in a data-driven agent-based model (Q2002661) (← links)
- Income inequality and the depth of economic downturns (Q2043133) (← links)
- Working, consuming, and dying: quantifying the diversity in the American experience (Q2136972) (← links)
- Income inequality and endogenous market structure under directed search (Q2138075) (← links)
- Mobility and volatility: what is behind the rising income inequality in the United States (Q2148323) (← links)
- Labor market trends and the changing value of time (Q2191497) (← links)
- Has consumption inequality mirrored wealth inequality in the Survey of Consumer Finances? (Q2208665) (← links)
- Risk sharing contracts with private information and one-sided commitment (Q2323289) (← links)
- Consumption habits and humps (Q2403450) (← links)
- Can faster income growth reduce well-being? (Q2500709) (← links)
- Consumption Inequality and Income Uncertainty (Q4266363) (← links)
- Conspicuous Consumption, Inequality and Debt: The Nature of Consumption‐driven Profit‐led Regimes (Q4617769) (← links)
- Firm Heterogeneity in Consumption Baskets: Evidence from Home and Store Scanner Data (Q5090036) (← links)
- Permanent‐income inequality (Q6067190) (← links)
- Identifying household finance heterogeneity via deep clustering (Q6115948) (← links)
- Effects of patent policy on growth and inequality: exogenous versus endogenous quality improvements (Q6494450) (← links)
- A quantitative theory of the credit score (Q6536591) (← links)
- Accounting for social security claiming behavior (Q6548645) (← links)
- Efficient risk sharing and separation (Q6564061) (← links)