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Creator: Boerma, Job and Karabarbounis, Loukas Series: Working paper (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 746 Abstract: We revisit the causes, welfare consequences, and policy implications of the dispersion in households' labor market outcomes using a model with uninsurable risk, incomplete asset markets, and home production. Allowing households to be heterogeneous in both their disutility of home work and their home production efficiency, we find that home production amplifies welfare-based differences meaning that inequality in standards of living is larger than we thought. We infer significant home production efficiency differences across households because hours working at home do not covary with consumption and wages in the cross section of households. Heterogeneity in home production efficiency is essential for inequality, as home production would not amplify inequality if differences at home only reflected heterogeneity in disutility of work.
Keyword: Home production, Consumption, Inequality, and Labor supply Subject (JEL): D60 - Welfare Economics: General, E21 - Macroeconomics: Consumption; Saving; Wealth, J22 - Time Allocation and Labor Supply, and D10 - Household Behavior: General -
Creator: Boerma, Job and Karabarbounis, Loukas Series: Working paper (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 763 Abstract: During the past two decades, households experienced increases in their average wages and expenditures alongside with divergent trends in their wages, expenditures, and time allocation. We develop a model with incomplete asset markets and household heterogeneity in market and home technologies and preferences to account for these labor market trends and assess their welfare consequences. Using micro data on expenditures and time use, we identify the sources of heterogeneity across households, document how these sources have changed over time, and perform counterfactual analyses. Given the observed increase in leisure expenditures relative to leisure time and the complementarity of these inputs in leisure technology, we infer a significant increase in the average productivity of time spent on leisure. The increasing productivity of leisure time generates significant welfare gains for the average household and moderates negative welfare effects from the rising dispersion of expenditures and time allocation across households.
Keyword: Consumption, Inequality, Time use, and Leisure productivity Subject (JEL): E21 - Macroeconomics: Consumption; Saving; Wealth, J22 - Time Allocation and Labor Supply, D10 - Household Behavior: General, and D60 - Welfare Economics: General -
Creator: Allen, Beth, Dutta, Jayasri, and Polemarchakis, H. M. (Heraklis M.) Series: Discussion paper (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Institute for Empirical Macroeconomics) Number: 090 Abstract: This paper studies the outcome of fully insured random selections among multiple competitive equilibria. This defines an iterative procedure of reallocation which is Pareto improving at each step. The process converges to a unique Pareto optimal allocation in finitely many steps. The key requirement is that random selections be continuous, which is a generic condition for smooth exchange economies with strictly concave utility functions.
Subject (JEL): D60 - Welfare Economics: General, D50 - General Equilibrium and Disequilibrium: General, and D62 - Externalities -
Creator: Caplin, Andrew and Leahy, John Series: Discussion paper (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Institute for Empirical Macroeconomics) Number: 137 Abstract: In welfare theory it is standard to pick the consumption stream that maximizes the welfare of the representative agent. We argue against this position, and show that a benevolent social planner will generally place a greater weight on future consumption than does the representative agent.
Subject (JEL): D60 - Welfare Economics: General -
Creator: Chari, V. V. and Jones, Larry E. Series: Staff report (Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Research Department) Number: 142 Abstract: We examine the validity of one version of the Coase Theorem: In any economy in which property rights are fully allocated, competition will lead to efficient allocations. This version of the theorem implies that the public goods problem can be solved by allocating property rights fully and letting markets do their work. We show that this mechanism is not likely to work well in economies with either pure public goods or global externalities. The reason is that the privatized economy turns out to be highly susceptible to strategic behavior in that the free-rider problem in public goods economies manifests itself as a complementary monopoly problem in the private goods economy. If the public goods or externalities are local in nature, however, market mechanisms are likely to work well.
Our work is related to the recent literature on the foundations of Walrasian equilibrium in that it highlights a relationship among the appropriateness of Walrasian equilibrium as a solution concept, the incentives for strategic play, the aggregate level of complementarities in the economy, and the problem of coordinating economic activity.
Keyword: Public goods, Externalities, Complementary monopoly, and Free-rider problem Subject (JEL): D50 - General Equilibrium and Disequilibrium: General, D60 - Welfare Economics: General, and H40 - Publicly Provided Goods: General