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Deep habits

Deep habits
Deep habits
This paper generalizes the standard habit-formation model to an environment in which agents form habits over individual varieties of goods as opposed to over a composite consumption good. We refer to this preference specification as deep habit formation. Under deep habits, the demand function faced by individual producers depends on past sales. This feature is typically assumed ad hoc in customer-market and brand-switching-cost models. A central result of the paper is that deep habits give rise to countercyclical mark-ups, which is in line with the empirical evidence. This result is important, because ad hoc formulations of customer-market and switching-cost models have been criticized for implying procyclical and hence counterfactual mark-up movements. Under deep habits, consumption and wages respond procyclically to government-spending shocks. The paper provides econometric estimates of the parameters pertaining to the deep-habit model.
0034-6527
195-218
Ravn, Morten
00df876a-9877-4ced-b1d0-1cdfaf76f7ca
Schmitt-Grohé, Stephanie
5df092fe-bf04-4261-bf44-6fa35013d828
Uribe, Martín
35e53493-3bbb-4364-aa1e-6c3d685c95dc
Ravn, Morten
00df876a-9877-4ced-b1d0-1cdfaf76f7ca
Schmitt-Grohé, Stephanie
5df092fe-bf04-4261-bf44-6fa35013d828
Uribe, Martín
35e53493-3bbb-4364-aa1e-6c3d685c95dc

Ravn, Morten, Schmitt-Grohé, Stephanie and Uribe, Martín (2006) Deep habits. Review of Economic Studies, 73 (1), 195-218. (doi:10.1111/j.1467-937X.2006.00374.x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper generalizes the standard habit-formation model to an environment in which agents form habits over individual varieties of goods as opposed to over a composite consumption good. We refer to this preference specification as deep habit formation. Under deep habits, the demand function faced by individual producers depends on past sales. This feature is typically assumed ad hoc in customer-market and brand-switching-cost models. A central result of the paper is that deep habits give rise to countercyclical mark-ups, which is in line with the empirical evidence. This result is important, because ad hoc formulations of customer-market and switching-cost models have been criticized for implying procyclical and hence counterfactual mark-up movements. Under deep habits, consumption and wages respond procyclically to government-spending shocks. The paper provides econometric estimates of the parameters pertaining to the deep-habit model.

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More information

Published date: January 2006
Organisations: Social Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 47648
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/47648
ISSN: 0034-6527
PURE UUID: 5b0299e8-e040-46cb-a250-164bd9082314

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 07 Aug 2007
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 09:34

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Contributors

Author: Morten Ravn
Author: Stephanie Schmitt-Grohé
Author: Martín Uribe

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