The implication of subsistence consumption for economic welfare
The implication of subsistence consumption for economic welfare
Using a subsistence consumption-augmented real business cycle model, we show that, for any given exogenous growth rates or parameter values, high initial subsistence levels increase the welfare cost of business cycles. This happens because subsistence consumption increases consumption volatility. Our finding suggests that eliminating economic fluctuations can be more beneficial to less-developed economies in which subsistence consumption is a high fraction of aggregate consumption. However, fast-growing economies exhibit a lower discrepancy of welfare costs between rich and poor countries, a result that also highlights the importance of growth-enhancing policies
30-33
Li, Qian
e8950786-8f13-45ac-9a4d-8942268fe32c
Shim, Myungkyu
44ae49a1-2e01-41ae-8f51-5d7f70e8ad56
Wen, Yongheng
96145b56-51da-472c-9eb4-626bdedbd203
1 September 2017
Li, Qian
e8950786-8f13-45ac-9a4d-8942268fe32c
Shim, Myungkyu
44ae49a1-2e01-41ae-8f51-5d7f70e8ad56
Wen, Yongheng
96145b56-51da-472c-9eb4-626bdedbd203
Li, Qian, Shim, Myungkyu and Wen, Yongheng
(2017)
The implication of subsistence consumption for economic welfare.
Economics Letters, 158 (9), .
(doi:10.1016/j.econlet.2017.06.038).
Abstract
Using a subsistence consumption-augmented real business cycle model, we show that, for any given exogenous growth rates or parameter values, high initial subsistence levels increase the welfare cost of business cycles. This happens because subsistence consumption increases consumption volatility. Our finding suggests that eliminating economic fluctuations can be more beneficial to less-developed economies in which subsistence consumption is a high fraction of aggregate consumption. However, fast-growing economies exhibit a lower discrepancy of welfare costs between rich and poor countries, a result that also highlights the importance of growth-enhancing policies
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Accepted/In Press date: 24 June 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 June 2017
Published date: 1 September 2017
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Local EPrints ID: 471735
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471735
ISSN: 0165-1765
PURE UUID: c3c685b0-4bf3-4d63-9424-9a0f3cd2bcd2
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Date deposited: 17 Nov 2022 17:40
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 22:11
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Author:
Myungkyu Shim
Author:
Yongheng Wen
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