© February 2, 2009, Christopher Carroll TractableBufferStock

A Tractable Model of Buffer Stock Saving

1 Introduction

This handout illustrates the logic of precautionary saving by assuming that individuals face only a single, simple kind of uncertainty: A small risk of becoming permanently unemployed. More realistic assumptions yield similar conclusions (after much more work).1

2 The Microeconomic Consumer’s Problem

The aggregate wage Wt  grows by a constant factor G  every period, reflecting exogenous productivity growth:

Wt+1    =   GWt.                                         (1)

The interest rate is exogenous, because the consumer lives in a small open economy; the interest factor is assumed to be constant at R  .  Defining mmm  as market resources (net worth plus current income), aaa  as end-of-period assets after all actions have been accomplished (specifically, after the consumption decision), and bbb  as bank balances before receipt of labor income, individuals are subject to a dynamic budget constraint (DBC) that can be decomposed into the following elements:

   aaat  =   mmmt  -  ccct                                             (2)
 bbb     =   Raaa                                                   (3)
  t+1         t
mmmt+1   =   bbbt+1 +  ℓt+1Wt+1  εt+1                                (4)
where ℓ  measures the consumer’s labor productivity (‘endowment’) and ε  is a dummy variable indicating the consumer’s employment state: Everyone in this economy is either employed (state ‘e’), in which case ε =  1  , or unemployed (state ‘u’), in which case ε =  0  , so that for unemployed individuals labor income is zero.2

2.1 The Unemployed Consumer’s Problem

Once a person becomes unemployed, that person can never become employed again (i.e. if        εt = 0  then εt+1  = 0  ). Consumers have a CRRA felicity function u (∙) =  ∙1- ρ∕(1 -  ρ)  , and discount future utility geometrically by β  per period. The solution to the unemployed consumer’s optimization problem is3

        (           ≡ÞÞÞR     )
               ◜----◞ ◟----◝
cccu  =   |(1  -  R - 1(R β )1∕ρ|) bbbt,                               (5)
 t

        ◟---------◝◜---------◞
                 ≡ κu
where the u  superscript signifies the consumer’s (un)employment status; κu  is the marginal propensity to consume for the perfect foresight consumer, which is strictly below the MPC for the problem with uncertainty (Carroll and Kimball (1996)); and ÞÞÞ
  R   is what Carroll (2004) calls the ‘return patience factor.’

We now impose what Carroll (2004) calls the ‘return impatience condition’ (RIC),

(          )
  (R β)1∕ρ
  ---------  <  1                                          (6)
     R
◟----◝◜----◞
    = ÞÞÞR
which gets its name because it guarantees that κu  >  0  – the consumer must not be so patient that that a boost to resources fails to boost spending.4 An alternative (equally correct) interpretation is that the condition guarantees that the PDV of consumption for the unemployed consumer is not infinity (for a perfect foresight consumer, PerfForesightCRRA shows that consumption grows by the factor      1∕ρ
(R β)  , so if we do not impose the RIC, consumption would ‘want’ to grow by a factor greater than the factor    R  by which it is being discounted). ÞÞÞR   is the ‘return patience factor’ because it defines patience relative to the rate of return; correspondingly, we define the ‘return patience rate’ as lower-case
þr  ≡   log ÞÞÞR                                          (7)

    ≈   ÞÞÞR  - 1                                         (8)
           u
    =   - κ                                             (9)
and we say that a consumer is ‘return impatient’ if the RIC (6) holds (equivalent conditions are             þr <  0  and κu  >  0  ).5

2.2 The Employed Consumer’s Problem

2.2.1 Unemployment Risk as a Mean Preserving Spread

A consumer who is employed in the current period has ε  = 1
 t  ; if this person is still employed next period (εt+1 =  1  ), market resources will be

  e         e     e
mmm t+1 =  (mmm t - ccct)R +  Wt+1  ℓt+1.
(10)

However, there is no guarantee that the consumer will remain employed: Employed consumers face a constant risk ℧  of becoming unemployed. It will be convenient also to define //℧  ≡  1 - ℧  as the probability that a consumer does not become unemployed. Whether the consumer is employed or not, his labor productivity ℓ  is well-defined:6 ℓ  is assumed to grow by a factor //℧ - 1   every period,

ℓt+1  =  ℓt∕//℧,
(11)

which means that for a consumer who remains employed, labor income will grow by factor

Γ   =   G ∕//℧                                         (12 )
so that the expected labor income growth factor for employed consumers is the same G  as in the perfect foresight case:
                             (        )
                               ℓtGWt---             /
    Et [Wt+1  ℓt+1εt+1 ]  =       /℧/      (℧ ×  0 + /℧ ×  1)
(                    )
  Et[Wt+1--ℓt+1εt+1-]
                         =   G,
        Wt  ℓt
which is the reason for (11)’s assumption about the growth of individual labor productivity: It implies that an increase in ℧  is a pure increase in uncertainty with no effect on the PDV of expected labor income.
2.2.2 First Order Optimality Condition

The same solution methods used in PerfForesightCRRA can now be applied (take the first order condition with respect to ccc  , use the Envelope theorem); the only difference is the need to keep the expectations operator in place. Using ∙ as a placeholder for ‘e’ or ‘u,’ the usual steps lead to the standard consumption Euler equation:

u ′(cccet)  =   Rβ Et [u′(ccc∙t+1)]                                   (13 )
                   [ (      )   ]
                       ccc∙t+1   - ρ
     1   =   Rβ Et     --e--      .                             (14 )
                        ccct

Now define nonbold variables as the bold equivalent divided by the level of permanent labor income for an employed consumer, e.g.  e     e
ct =  ccct∕(Wt  ℓt)  , and rewrite the consumption Euler equation as

              [                      ]
                (  ∙            ) - ρ
1  =   R β E      ct+1Wt+1--ℓt+1-                                           (15 )
             t       ceWt  ℓt
              [       t      ]
                ( c∙    ) - ρ
   =   R β E      -t+1Γ                                                     (16 )
             t     cet
                  [            ]
                    ( c∙   ) - ρ
   =   Γ - ρRβ Et     -t+1-                                                 (17 )
                       cet
                {          (      )         (      )    }
                             ce     - ρ       cu     - ρ
   =   Γ - ρRβ    (1 -  ℧)   -t+1-     +  ℧   --t+1-       .                 (18 )
                              cet               cet

2.2.3 Analysis and Intuition Of Consumption Growth Expression

It will be useful now to define a ‘growth patience factor’ (this terminology will be justified below):

         (          )
           (R β )1∕ρ
ÞÞÞ Γ  =     ---------  ,                                   (19 )
              Γ
which is the factor by which  e
c  would grow in the perfect foresight version of the model with income growth factor Γ  (again see PerfForesightCRRA). Using this, (18) can be written as
                   (   e  ) - ρ {        [ (  u  )  (   e  ) ]- ρ}
                  ρ   ct+1--                  ct+1-    -ct--
        1   =   ÞÞÞ Γ     e        /℧/ +  ℧       e       e                        (20 )
                       ct                     ct      ct+1
                   (   e  ) - ρ {       [ (  u   ) - ρ    ] }
                  ρ   ct+1--                 ct+1-
            =   ÞÞÞ Γ    ce        1 +  ℧     ce        -  1                      (21 )
                        t                    t+1
( ce   ) ρ         {        [ ( ce   ) ρ     ]}
  -t+1-     =   ÞÞÞ ρ  1 +  ℧     -t+1-   -  1                                    (22 )
   cet             Γ             cut+1
 (      )          {        [ (      ) ρ     ]}1 ∕ρ
   cet+1                         cet+1
   --e--    =   ÞÞÞ Γ  1 +  ℧     -u---   -  1       .                            (23 )
    ct                          ct+1

To understand (23), we temporarily make some judicious approximations. Define          (          )
           cet+1- cut+1
∇t+1   ≡      cut+1 (which is the proportion by which consumption would be greater next period if one is employed than if one is unemployed), and define an ‘excess prudence’ factor

        (        )
ω   =     ρ----1-                                       (24 )
             2
and notice that if we use from MathFacts the second-order and then the first-order Taylor approximations [TaylorTwo]         ζ                               2
(1 +  ϵ)  ≈  1 + ζ ϵ + (1 ∕2)ζ (ζ - 1 )ϵ   and then [TaylorOne] (1 + ϵ )ζ ≈ 1 +  ζϵ  , the expression in braces in (23) can be rewritten
{        [ (  e  ) ρ     ] }1 ∕ρ      {        [(   u      e       u   ) ρ    ] }1 ∕ρ
             ct+1-                                c-t+1-+--ct+1----ct+1
  1 +  ℧     cu      -  1         =     1 + ℧             cu              -  1           (25 )
              t+1                                          t+1
                                  =   {1 +  ℧ [(1 +  ∇t+1 )ρ -  1]}1∕ρ                   (26 )
                                      {       [                                ]}
                                  ≈    1 +  ℧  1 +  ρ ∇t+1  + ρ (∇t+1 )2ω  - 1    1∕ρ     (27 )
                                      {                              }
                                  =    1 +  ρ℧ (∇     +  (∇     )2ω ) 1∕ρ                (28 )
                                                   t+1       t+1
                                  ≈   1 + ℧  (1 + ∇t+1  ω )∇t+1,                         (29 )
which means we can rewrite (23) as
(  cet+1-)   ≈   (1 +  ℧ (1 + ω ∇     )∇    ) ÞÞÞ                         (30 )
    ce                           t+1    t+1    Γ
     t
which can be simplified in the logarithmic utility case (where ω  = 0  ) to
(  e   )
  ct+1-
    e      ≈   (1 + ℧ ∇t+1  )ÞÞÞ Γ .                             (31 )
   ct

Now since consumption if employed  e
ct+1   is surely greater than consumption if unemployed cu
 t+1   , ∇t+1   is certainly a positive number. But since ÞÞÞ Γ   is the value that ce   ∕ce
 t+1   t  would exhibit in a perfect foresight model, this equation tells us that uncertainty boosts consumption growth for continuing-employed consumers – in the logarithmic case, by an amount proportional to the probability of becoming unemployed ℧  multiplied by the size of the ‘consumption risk’ (the amount by which consumption would fall if unemployment occurs).

For any given me
  t  , greater uncertainty does not change the PDV of future labor income, and therefore the human wealth term in the intertemporal budget constraint is not modified by an increase in ℧  . But consumption growth will be faster with a larger ℧  . Faster consumption growth with the same PDV must correspond to a lower current consumption level. Thus, introduction of a risk of becoming unemployed ℧  induces a (precautionary) increase in saving.

In the (persuasive) case that ρ  > 1  , (30) implies that a consumer with a higher degree of prudence (larger ρ  and therefore larger ω  ) will anticipate greater consumption growth. This reflects the greater precautionary saving motive induced by a higher degree of prudence.

To do a phase-diagram analysis of this model, we must find the Δce   = 0  and Δme   =  0  loci. For a consumer who is unemployed in period t + 1  , dividing both sides of (4) by Wt+1  ℓt+1   yields

mut+1   =   but+1  =  (met - cet) (R ∕Γ ).                           (32 )
                               ◟-◝◜ -◞
                                 ≡R

Since from (5) we know that   u        u    u
c t+1  = m  t+1 κ  , substituting  e       e     e
ct+1 =  ct ≡  c  into (23) yields

                       {        [ (         )       ] }
                                      ce      ρ
                1  =     1 +  ℧     ---t+1---   -  1    ÞÞÞ ρΓ                 (33 )
                                    κumut+1
                               (         e       ) ρ
             ÞÞÞ - ρ =   /℧  + ℧    -------ct-------                           (34 )
               Γ       /         (me  -  ce)R κu
(           )          (            t    )t
  ÞÞÞ - ρ-  //℧   1∕ρ               ce
  --Γ-------       =     ----e---te------                                   (35 )
 -----℧-  -------        (m  t - ct)R  κu
◟      ◝ ◜      ◞
       ≡ ϙ
               cet  =   (met -  cet)R κu ϙ.                                   (36 )

We know that me -  ce >  0
  t    t  because a consumer in these circumstances (facing possible perpetual unemployment) will never borrow (a full discussion of this point follows below). Since the RIC imposes κu >  0  , (36) tells us that steady-state consumption is a positive finite number so long as ϙ  is a positive finite number, which will hold true iff the numerator on the LHS of (35) is a positive finite number; that is, we need the condition:

 Γ ρ(R β )- 1 - //℧ >   0                                         (37 )
                ρ
              Γ    >   (Rβ )(1 -  ℧ )                            (38 )
(              )       (      1∕ρ )
   -----1------    >     (R-β)----  .                            (39 )
   (1 - ℧ )1∕ρ              Γ
                       ◟----◝◜----◞
                       =ÞÞÞ Γ from (19)

In the limit as ℧  approaches zero, this condition reduces to a requirement that the growth patience factor ÞÞÞΓ   is less than one

ÞÞÞ Γ  <   1,                                         (40 )
which following Carroll (2004) we call the ‘growth impatience condition’ (GIC) by analogy to the ‘return impatience condition’ (6) imposed earlier. The GIC ensures that a consumer facing no uncertainty is sufficiently impatient that his wealth-to-permanent-income ratio will fall over time.7

Using γ ≡  log Γ  , we similarly define the corresponding ‘growth impatience rate’

þγ  ≡   log ÞÞÞ Γ                                       (41 )
so that the growth impatience condition can also be written as
þ γ ≈ ρ - 1(r - ϑ) -  γ  <   0.                               (42 )
2.2.4 Why Increased Unemployment Risk Increases Growth Impatience

Equation (39) is easier to satisfy as unemployment risk increases, because with ρ >  1  an increase in ℧  decreases the denominator on the LHS of (39), for two reasons.

First, an increase in ℧  is like a reduction in the future downweighting factor, conditional on the consumer remaining in the employed state, as can be seen directly by fact that the //℧  term in (18) multiplies β  for the consumer who remains employed.8 Of course, this is balanced by an increase in the probability of transitioning to the unemployed state, but the RIC guarantees that everything is well-behaved in the unemployed state, so the increase in the probability of that state does not affect the finiteness of the PDV’s of consumption, income, or value.

The second reason that an increase in ℧  weakens the growth impatience condition (makes it easier to satisfy) is that, because we adjust labor productivity growth in order to maintain constant human wealth for different values of ℧  (eq. (11)), for higher ℧  , growth is greater conditional on remaining employed. The continuously-employed consumer is effectively more ‘impatient’ in the relevant sense of desiring consumption growth slower than income growth.9

Note that the fact that the GIC is easier to satisfy as ℧  increases means that if the perfect foresight version of the GIC (where ℧  is zero) is satisfied, then the ‘true’ GIC (40) will certainly be satisfied.

2.2.5 The Target Level of me

Imposing the RIC and the GIC, we can obtain    e
Δc t =  0  by substituting  e       e
ct+1 =  ct  into equation (36):

cet  =   metR κu ϙ -  cetR κu ϙ                                (43 )
        (       u    )
 e        --R--κ-ϙ----    e
ct  =     1 +  R κu ϙ   m t.                                 (44 )

Now we need to use the normalized version of the DBC (equation (10)),

  e            e    e
m t+1  =   (m  t - ct)R  +  1                                (45 )
to derive the   e         e
m t+1 =  m  t  locus (also referred to as the     e
Δm  t =  0  locus):
R  - 1(met - 1)  =   met -  cet                                       (46 )
              e        e      - 1   e
             ct  =   m t -  R    (m t - 1 )                          (47 )
                             - 1   e      - 1
                 =   (1 -  R    )m t + R    .                        (48 )

The steady-state levels of   e
m  and  e
c  are the values of these two variables at which both (48) and (36) hold. This is just a set of two equations and two unknowns, and with some tedious algebra can be solved explicitly (see the appendix).

In the special case of logarithmic utility (ρ =  1  ), the appendix shows that an approximation to target market resources will be given by

              (                                     )
                                  1
mˇe    ≈   1 +   ------------------------------------                      (49 )
                ( γ - r) +  ϑ(1 +  (γ +  ϑ -  r)∕℧ )
and that the GIC and the RIC guarantee that the denominator of the fraction is a positive number.

This expression encapsulates several of the key intuitions of the model. The human wealth effect of growth is captured by the first γ  term in the denominator; clearly, for any calibration for which the denominator is a positive number, increasing γ  will increase the size of the denominator and therefore reduce the target level of wealth. The human wealth effect of interest rates is correspondingly captured by the -  r  term. An increase in the future discounting rate, ϑ  , will also increase the size of the denominator and therefore reduce target wealth. Finally, a reduction in unemployment risk will boost (γ +  ϑ - r)∕ ℧  and therefore reduce target wealth.10

The assumption of log utility is restrictive, and probably does not capture sufficient aversion to consumption fluctuations. Fortunately, another special case helps to illuminate the effect of higher levels of prudence. The appendix shows that, in the special case where ϑ  = r  , the target level of wealth will be given by

             (                     1                     )
ˇm   ≈   1 +    -------------------------------------------                  (50 )
               (γ -  r) + ϑ (1 + (γ ∕℧ )(1 -  (γ ∕℧ )ω ))
which is like (49) (with ϑ -  r =  0  ) but with the addition of the final term involving ω  which measures the amount by which prudence exceeds the logarithmic benchmark. An increase in ω  reduces the denominator of (50) and thereby boosts the target level of wealth: Exactly what would be expected from an increase in the intensity of the precautionary motive.

Note that the different effects interact with each other, in the sense that the strength of, say, the human wealth effect will vary depending on the values of the other parameters. The ways in which these interactions make intuitive sense will repay deep reflection. (Hint: How much I care about the future governs how powerful future events are in determining my targets. Think about it.).

2.2.6 The Phase Diagram

Figure 1 presents the phase diagram.



Figure 1: Phase Diagram

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The Δmet  =  0  locus, given in (48), indicates, for a given level of met  , how much consumption  e
ct  would be exactly the right amount to leave    e
m  unchanged.11 Thus, any point below the      e
Δm   t = 0  line will constitute consuming less than the break-even amount, so wealth will rise. Conversely for points above me  . This provides the logic for the horizontal arrows of motion in the diagram: Above     e
Δm  t =  0  they point left, and below they point right.

The intuition for the     e
Δc  t = 0  locus (which comes from (36)) is a bit subtler. Recall that expected consumption growth depends on the amount by which consumption will fall if the bad state is realized. For a given level of resources, if actual consumption when employed is less than the break-even amount, then the ˇce∕ˇcu  ratio is smaller, and thus consumption growth is smaller. Since  e
c  growth was zero along the     e
Δc  t = 0  locus, lower than zero means negative ce  changes. Hence the arrows of motion are downward-pointing below the Δcet =  0  locus and upward-pointing above it.



Figure 2: The Consumption Function

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2.2.7 The Consumption Function

The next figure shows the optimal consumption function c(m )  for an employed consumer (dropping the e  superscript to reduce clutter). This is actually just the stable arm in the phase diagram. (Think about why). Also plotted are the 45 degree line along which        e
c = m  t  as well as the function

¯c (m )  =   (m  -  1 + hhh )κu                                 (51 )
where
       (           )
          ----1-----
hhh  =                                                     (52 )
          1 - G ∕R
is the level of (normalized) human wealth. ¯c (m )  is the solution to a perfect foresight problem in which income grows by the factor G  ; it is depicted in order to introduce a final fact: As wealth approaches infinity, the solution to the problem with uncertain labor income approaches arbitrarily close to the perfect foresight solution.12

Note that c(m  )  is concave.13 That is, the marginal propensity to consume κκκ (m ) ≡  dc (m )∕dm  is higher at low levels of        m  . This is because of the increase in the intensity of the precautionary motive as resources     m  decline; the consequences of becoming unemployed with little wealth are very painful. The MPC is high at low levels of m  because at low levels of m  the relaxation in the intensity of the precautionary motive with each extra bit of m  is quite large (Kimball (1990)). This diminution in the precautionary motive translates into an increase in consumption; for m  -poor consumers even a modest increase in m  can give a substantial boost to c  .

This point is clearest as m  approaches zero. Note that the consumption function always remains below the 45 degree line. This is because if the consumer were to spend all his resources in period t  , c  =  m
 t      t  , then if he became unemployed next period he would have   u
m t+1 =  (mt  -  ct)R  =  0  which would induce  u        u  u
ct+1 =  κ  m t+1 =  0  , yielding negative infinite utility. Thus the consumer will never spend all of his resources - he will always leave at least a little bit for next period in case of disaster (unemployment).14

2.2.8 Expected Consumption Growth Is Downward Sloping in me

The next figure illustrates some of the same points in a different way. It depicts the growth rate of consumption as a function of me
  t  . Since ℧  ≥ 0  , the perfect foresight GIC for this model implies:

γ  >   ρ- 1(r - ϑ ),                                    (53 )
a condition that can be visually verified for our benchmark calibration in figure 3. Now multiply both sides of (23) by Γ  , obtaining
  (cccet+1-)            1∕ρ {        [( cet+1-) ρ     ]}1 ∕ρ
      e      =   (Rβ )      1 + ℧      u       - 1                         (54 )
     ccct                               ct+1
Δ log ccce    ≈    ρ- 1(r - ϑ) +  ℧ ∇    ,                                   (55 )
       t+1                          t+1
where the last line uses the same (dubious) approximations used to obtain (30).15

Thus consumption growth is equal to what it would be in the absence of uncertainty, plus a precautionary term. Furthermore, the precautionary contribution will become arbitrarily large as mt →   0  because cu   =  mu   κu  =  (mt  - c(mt  ))R κu
 t+1      t+1  approaches zero as mt  →   0  . Sure enough, figure 3 shows that as    e
m  t  gets low, expected consumption growth gets very large.



Figure 3: Income and Consumption Growth

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Next, note that the point where the consumption growth locus meets the income growth line is labelled ˇm  . This is because the place where consumption growth is equal to income growth is at the target value of me  .

2.2.9 Summing Up the Intuition

We are finally in position to get an intuitive understanding of how the model works, and why there is a target wealth ratio. On the one hand, consumers are growth-impatient. This prevents their wealth-to-income ratio from heading off to infinity. On the other hand, consumers have a precautionary motive that intensifies more and more as the level of wealth gets lower and lower. At some point the precautionary motive gets strong enough to counterbalance impatience. The point where impatience matches prudence defines the target wealth-to-income ratio.



Figure 4: Effect of An Increase In r

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Now consider the results of increasing the interest rate to ˆr >  r  , depicted in figure 4. Obviously the perfect foresight consumption growth locus will shift up, to   - 1
ρ   (ˆr - ϑ )  , inducing a corresponding increase in the expected consumption growth locus. But we have not changed the expected growth rate of income. It is clear from the figure, therefore, that the new target level of cash-on-hand ˆme  will be greater than the original target. That is, an increase in the interest rate increases the target level of wealth, as would be expected on intuitive grounds.

2.2.10 Death to the Log-Linearized Consumption Euler Equation!

Now, a crucial insight. Figures 3 and 4 show that, so long as consumers are impatient, the steady state growth rate of consumption will be equal to the steady-state growth rate of income,

Δ  log  ccce    =   γ.                                     (56 )
        t+1

Yet the approximate Euler equation for consumption growth

        e          - 1
Δ  log ccct+1  ≈   ρ   (r - ϑ ) + ℧ ∇t+1,                            (57 )
does not contain any term explicitly involving income growth. How can we reconcile these two expressions for consumption growth? Only by realizing that the size of the precautionary term ℧ ∇t+1   is endogenous: It depends on γ  . Indeed, we can solve (56) and (57) to determine that in steady-state we must have
℧ ˇ∇   ≈   γ -  ρ- 1(r - ϑ ).                                (58 )

We can use this equation to understand the relationship between parameters and steady-state levels of wealth, by noting that          e
∇t+1  (m  )  is a downward-sloping function of          e
      m  (see figure 3 again). This is because at low levels of current wealth, much of the spending of employed consumers is financed by their current income. If they lose that income, they will have no choice but to cut consumption drastically, implying a large value of ∇t+1   .

For example, an increase in the growth rate of income implies that the RHS of equation (58) increases. The new target level of mˇ  must be lower, because lower wealth induces greater consumption risk and a corresponding increase in the LHS of (58). This is how the human wealth effect works in this framework: Consumers who anticipate faster income growth will hold less market wealth.

The fact that consumption growth equals income growth in the steady-state poses major problems for empirical attempts to estimate the Euler equation. To see why, suppose we had a collection of countries indexed by i  , identical in all respects except that they have different interest rates r
 i  . Then in the spirit of Hall (1988), one might be tempted to estimate an equation:

Δ log ccci  =   η0 +  η1ri + ϵi,                               (59 )
and to interpret the coefficient estimate on ri  as an indication of the value of  - 1
ρ   .

But suppose that all of these countries contained impatient consumers and were in their steady-states where Δ log ccci =  γi  . Suppose further that all countries had the same steady-state income growth rate and unemployment rate.16 Then the regression equation would return the estimates

η0   =   γ                                          (60 )

η1   =   0.                                         (61 )

The econometric problem here is that there is an omitted variable from the regression specification, the ℧ ∇ct+1,i  term, which is (perfectly) correlated with the included variable ri  . Thus, Euler equation estimation cannot be expected to return an unbiased estimate of ρ - 1   . For much more on this problem, see Carroll (2001). For empirical evidence that the problem is important in macroeconomic practice, see Parker and Preston (2005).

2.2.11 A Final Experiment

We now consider a final experiment: A decrease in the time preference rate. Dropping the       e  superscripts in order to reduce clutter, Figure 5 depicts the effect on the employed consumer’s spending by showing each successive point in time as a dot. Starting at time 0 from the steady-state level of consumption, the decrease in the future discounting rate (an increase in patience) causes an instantaneous drop in the level of consumption. Starting from this diminished base, consumption growth is subsequently faster than before the drop in ϑ  .17

Eventually consumption approaches its new, higher equilibrium ratio to permanent income at a new, higher level of equilibrium   e
m  . This higher level of consumption is financed in the long run by the higher interest income earned on the higher level of wealth.

Note again, however, that the equilibrium steady-state consumption growth is still equal to the growth rate of income (this follows from the fact that there is a steady-state level for the ratio of consumption to income, c  ). This means that the higher level of wealth in equilibrium ends up being precisely enough to reduce the precautionary term by an amount that exactly offsets the fact that the -  ρ- 1ϑ  term in the Euler equation is now smaller.

The final figures depict the time paths of consumption, market wealth, and the marginal propensity to consume κκκ(m  )  following the decline in ϑ  . These are implicit in the phase diagram analysis, but the dots in these two new diagrams are spread out evenly over time to give a sense of the time scale over which the model adjusts toward the steady state.



Figure 5: Effect of Lower ϑ  On Consumption Function

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Figure 6: Path of ce  Before and After ϑ  Decline

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Figure 7: Path of me  Before and After ϑ  Decline

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Figure 8: Marginal Propensity to Consume κt  Before and After ϑ  Decline

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3 A Macroeconomic Interpretation

Following Carroll and Jeanne (2008), this section extends the model to analyze macroeconomic dynamics in a small open economy with a large number of individuals, where the population statistics reflect the fulfillment of individual consumers’ ex ante expectations; for example, exactly proportion ℧  of households who are employed in period t  become ‘unemployed’ before t + 1  , so that the aggregate labor supply of the ‘active’ (still employed) members of a generation evolves according to

Lt+1,t =   /℧/Lt,t,                                      (62 )
where the first subscript denotes the date being examined and the second denotes the period of birth of the generation being examined.

We make strong assumptions that permit straightforward aggregation. The first such assumption is that newly unemployed households immediately migrate out of the country (think of British retirees moving to southern Spain).18 This means that macroeconomic variables will reflect only the circumstances of employed consumers, rather than a blend of the employed and the unemployed.

Each person is part of a single ‘generation’ of households born at the same time, and every new generation is larger by the factor Ξ  than the newborn generation in the previous period:

L         =   ΞL   .                                    (63 )
 t+1,t+1          t,t

We assume that total production by the (surviving) members of a generation grows by the factor G  every period. If total production is to grow despite a shrinking number of surviving members of the generation, production per active capita must grow by G ∕/℧/  as per (11).

Consider the economy in some period 0 in which the size of the newborn population and the wage rate have been normalized to L    =  W   =  1
 0,0      0  . If the economy has existed for -  τ  periods (where τ  is a negative number, indicating that the economy was created before period 0), the ratio of the total population to the population of newborns will be

                                                (             - τ+1)
      /         /     2          /     - τ        1----(//℧-∕Ξ-)-----
1 +  (/℧ ∕Ξ ) + (/℧ ∕Ξ )  +  ...+  (/℧ ∕ Ξ)     =        1 - (/℧/∕ Ξ )                (64 )
whose limit is a finite number so long as //℧ ∕Ξ <  1  , which we require.

Relative to the labor income of period 0’s newborn cohort (L0,0W0  =  1  ), the total labor income in period 0 of the generation born in period -  1  is Ξ - 1   ; the sum of the incomes of all of the two-period-old individuals is   - 2
Ξ   , and so on; total labor income for all generations in the economy in period 0 is

                                  (                 )
      - 1     - 2          τ        1----(Ξ-- 1)--τ+1
1 + Ξ    +  Ξ    + ...+  Ξ    =               - 1      ,                  (65 )
                                        1 - Ξ
which is finite so long as either population growth is positive Ξ  >  1  (which we will assume) or the economy has existed for a finite period of time (τ >  - ∞ ). In either case, the proportion of aggregate income accounted for by a generation born at any specific moment declines toward zero as time passes (old generations never die, they just fade away).

In the balanced growth equilibrium, the growth factor for aggregate population will therefore be Ξ  and output per capita will increase by G  per period. Total labor income therefore grows by ΞG.

3.1 Stakes

We now examine this model under two assumptions about the initial ‘stake’ of newborns in the economy. (We use ‘stake’ to designate a transfer received by newborns). This is explicitly not an inheritance, as we have assumed that individuals have no bequest motive and newborns are unrelated to anyone in the existing population. Our motivation is to make the model more tractable, rather than to represent an important feature of the real world; we later perform simulations designed to show that the characteristics of the model with no ‘stake’ are qualitatively and quantitatively similar to those of the more tractable model with the ‘stake’ that makes the model tractable.

3.1.1 A ‘Stake’ That Yields a Representative Agent

We first consider a version of the model in which an exogenous redistribution program guarantees that the behavior of employed households can be understood by analyzing the actions of a “representative employed agent.”

If a benevolent source outside the economy were to provide every newborn with an initial transfer upon birth of size ˇb  , then the newborn’s total monetary resources would be

me    =   ˇb + 1
  t,t
      =   ˇm.

Thus, per-capita market resources for members the newborn generation would be exactly equal to the target level of market resources for a person anticipating the future path of labor income that the members of the newborn generation actually anticipate (which is the same as the future path anticipated by all other generations as well).

If such a transfer policy had been in place forever, the economy at every point in time would consist of employed households whose consumption had been equal to its steady-state value         ce  for their whole lives. That is, every individual agent in this economy would be identical in their ratio of consumption, market resources, etc. to permanent labor income. The behavior of any individual would therefore be fully captured by the behavior of a representative employed agent.19

The foregoing scenario assumed that the ‘stake’ is provided by a mysterious ‘benevolent source outside the economy.’ Fortunately, there is an easy way to eliminate this problematic assumption: Assume that the stakes are financed by a wage tax.

The size of the required tax rate is calculated as follows. The total size of the resources transferred to the newborn generation must be

ˆe       ˆ    ˆ
bt,t  =   bLt,tWt                                       (66 )
where
Wˆt   =   (1 -  τ) Wt                                     (67 )
         ◟--◝◜ -◞
            ≡/τ
is the after-tax wage rate for the economy as a whole (and ˆb  is the steady state target ratio of bank balances to after-tax wages).

From (65), the ratio of total aggregate labor income to the labor income of the newborn generation is

(          )
      1
  ----------                                           (68 )
  1 -  Ξ - 1
so the aggregate wage tax rate required to finance a ‘stake’ of size ˆ
b  for newborns is given by
       (           )
ˆ         ---τ------
b  =            - 1                                      (69 )
          1 - Ξ
τ  =   (1 -  Ξ - 1)ˆb.                                    (70 )

Note, however, that in an economy where this tax has existed forever, the consequence of the tax is effectively just a permanent reduction in after-tax labor income by proportion /τ  , compared to its value in the absence of the tax. Given the homotheticity of the model, a permanent rescaling by a constant factor leaves the scaled version of the individual’s problem (and its solution) unchanged. Thus we can conclude not only that a representative agent exists in this economy, but that the steady-state characteristics of the representative agent’s problem are identical (in ratio form) to the characteristics of the unrescaled individual’s problem; that is, ˆc(m  ) = ce (m )  , ˆb =  ˇb  , and so on.

Matters are not much more complicated outside the balanced growth steady state, so long as we assume that the government always transfers the amount ˆ
b  to newborn households, financed by the tax τ  derived above. Consider, for example, an economy that was in steady-state equilibrium leading up to period t  , and at the beginning of t  there is a sudden realization that future growth rates will be higher than those anticipated and experienced in the past: G ′ > G  after t  . Since expected growth rates affect ˇb  , the tax rate must be immediately and permanently changed so that the generations born after t -  1  receive a ‘stake’ of the proper new size. This change in τ  has two consequences for the generations that survive from periods prior to t  . Under the old tax rate, they would have experienced be = bbb ∕/τW   =  ˇb
 t     t     t  ; the change in expectations has no effect on bbb
 t  or W
   t  but changes the tax rate to τ`  . Thus these households will have an actual resource ratio that differs from its new target value,  e   `ˇ
bt ⁄= b  , both because the after-tax income scaling factor has changed and because the target ratio has changed from ˇb  to `ˇ
b  .

However, if we started out in steady-state, the ratio problem of every member of the continuing-employed population is identical to that of every other such household (though, again, their masses differ depending on age, etc); as a result, the dynamics of the economy are fully captured by keeping track of the relative weights in the economy of the (gradually diminishing) ‘representative shocked agent’ and the (gradually increasing) ‘representative new agent’ whose behavior is locked at its steady-state value.20

Figure 9 illustrates the dynamics in this economy using an experiment identical to one explored above for the individual’s problem: In period 0 there is a one-off decline in the future discounting rate (assuming the economy was in steady state before period 0). In the previous model, each individual consumer’s consumption function shifted down, and consumption experienced a discrete jump downward, because the agent became more impatient. Here, there is a modest further effect: With more-patient consumers, the tax rate that the government sets to finance a transfer of ˇb  to the newborns must be larger (so that the ratio of initial assets to after-tax income is smaller). Qualitatively, the dynamics are indistinguishable from the individual consumer’s dynamics obtainable without working through the extra complication involved in accounting for the ‘stakes.’



Figure 9: Aggregate c  in PE/SOE Economy Before and After ϑ  Decline

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3.1.2 No Stake

The polar alternative to assuming that newborns get a ‘stake’ is to assume that newborns enter the economy with zero assets. Analysis of this version of the model must be performed using simulation methods, because households of different ages will have different levels of assets. (With a concave and nonanalytical consumption function, analytical aggregation cannot be performed.)

Our simulation procedure assumes that at date 0 the economy has existed forever (so that the age distribution of relative populations and productivities are at their steady-state values), but saving has been impossible prior to period 0.21 With everyone’s  e
bt =  0  , the ratio of market resources to permanent labor income is the same for all individuals:

  e
m 0,τ  =   1.                                        (71 )
The consumption ratio in period 0 is therefore c (1)  for every household (regardless of age), while the level of total labor income for a generation that is -  τ  periods old is /℧/τ  .22 The population of such workers is        - τ
(//℧ ∕Ξ )  , so aggregate consumption will be given by the per-capita consumption ratio, multiplied by the per-capita level of permanent income, multiplied by the population of workers still alive:
         -∑ ∞
ccc   =       c(1 )//℧ τ(//℧ ∕Ξ )- τ                               (72 )
  0
         τ=0
              -∑ ∞
     =   c(1)     Ξ τ                                         (73 )

              τ(=0        )
                    1
     =   c(1)   --------1-  .                                 (74 )
                1 -  Ξ

The longer a generation lives, the more time it will have had to save toward its target level of wealth; but newborns always begin life with no assets. After period 0, therefore, age-heterogeneity in assets and consumption ratios creeps into the population.

The foregoing discussion contains (in some cases implicitly) all the assumptions necessary to conduct a simulation of this economy. Figure 10 shows the path of the ratio ccct∕WtLt  starting from period 0 for an economy under our benchmark parameterization that generated our earlier figures. The only extra parameter required beyond those used before is Ξ  ; we choose Ξ  =  1.01  corresponding roughly to the postwar population growth rate in the United States.



Figure 10: Path of Aggregate c  in Stakeless PE/SOE Economy From Date 0

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Appendix

A The Exact Formula for ˇm

The steady-state value of me  will be where both (44) and (48) hold. To simplify the algebra, define          u
ζ ≡  R κ  ϙ  so that     u
R κ  ϙ =  ζΓ  . Then:

                        (       )
                          ---ζ---  ˇm   =   (1 -  R - 1) ˇm +  R - 1              (75 )
                          1 +  ζ
                      (         )
                          ---ζ---
                        R 1 +  ζ   ˇm   =   (R  -  1)mˇ +  1                     (76 )
        (    {            }     )
                 ζ
          R    -------- 1   +  1   ˇm   =   1                                    (77 )
(    {         1 + ζ }          )
        ζ - (1 +  ζ)      1 +  ζ
  R     -------------  +  -------  ˇm   =   1                                    (78 )
           1 +  ζ         1 +  ζ
                  (  1 + ζ -  R )
                     ------------  ˇm   =   1                                    (79 )
                       1 +  ζ
                                           (             )
                                              --1-+--ζ----
                                   ˇm   =      1 + ζ -  R                        (80 )
                                           (                   )
                                              1-+-ζ-+--R-----R--
                                   ˇm   =                                        (81 )
                                                1( +  ζ -  R   )
                                                       R
                                       =   1 +    ------------                  (82 )
                                                ( 1 +  ζ -  R   )
                                                        R
                                       =   1 +    --------------  .             (83 )
                                                  Γ +  ζ Γ -  R

A first point about this formula is suggested by the fact that

                          ϙ
              ◜----------◞ ◟----------◝
              (      (   - ρ    ) )1 ∕ρ
ζΓ   =   R κu   1 +    ÞÞÞ-Γ-----1-                                 (84 )
                          ℧
which is likely to increase as ℧  approaches zero.23 Note that the limit as ℧ →   0  is infinity, which implies that lim ℧→0  ˇm  =  1  . This is precisely what would be expected from this model in which consumers are impatient but self-constrained to have   e
m   >  1  : As the risk gets infinitesimally small, the amount by which target   e
m  exceeds its minimum possible value shrinks to zero.

We now show that the RIC and GIC ensure that the denominator of the fraction in (83) is positive:

                           u
Γ +  ζΓ -  R   =   Γ +  Rκ  ϙ -  R                                                   (85 )
                          (           1∕ρ)  (   (R-β)1∕ρ-- ρ         )1 ∕ρ
                                 (R-β)----    (---Γ---)------1-
               =   Γ +  R   1 -                                +  1      -  R        (86 )
                                    R                ℧
                          (              )  (       1∕ρ             )1 ∕ρ
                                 (R β)1∕ρ     ( (R-β)--)- ρ - 1
               >   Γ +  R   1 -  ---------    ----Γ------------+  1      -  R        (87 )
                                    R                 1
                          (           1∕ρ)
                                 (R-β)----  ----Γ----
               =   Γ +  R   1 -                   1∕ρ - R                            (88 )
                                    R       (R β )
                             Γ
               =   Γ +  R -----1∕ρ--  Γ -  R                                         (89 )
                     (    (Rβ )     )
                          Γ
               =   R   ----------  1                                                 (90 )
                       (R β )1∕ρ
               >   0.                                                                (91 )

However, note that ℧  also affects Γ  ; thus, the first inequality above does not necessarily imply that the denominator is decreasing as ℧  moves from 0  to 1  .

B An Approximation for ˇm

Now defining

        (           )
          ÞÞÞ -Γ ρ-  1
 aleph   =     ----------  ,                                   (92 )
              ℧
we can obtain further insight into (83) using a judicious mix of first- and second-order Taylor expansions (along with κu  = -  þr   ):
ζΓ   =   Rκu  (1 +  aleph  )1∕ρ                                                 (93 )
               (                                      )
     ≈   - R þr  1 + ρ - 1 aleph  + (ρ - 1)(ρ - 1 - 1 )( aleph 2 ∕2)                 (94 )
               (            {      (       )        } )
                       - 1           1----ρ-
     =   - R þr  1 +  ρ    aleph   1 +      ρ      ( aleph  ∕2)    .                 (95 )

But

        (                  )
          (1 +  þγ)- ρ - 1
 aleph   =     -----------------                                  (96 )
                 ℧
        ( 1 -  ρþ  -  1 )
    ≈     -------γ------                                     (97 )
                ℧
          (      )
    ≈   -   ρ-þγ-                                            (98 )
             ℧
which can be substituted into (95) to obtain
               (                                         )
ζΓ   ≈   - R þ   1 - (þ  ∕℧ )(1 +  (1 -  ρ)(-  þ ∕ ℧ )∕2)                      (99 )
              r(        γ     (                 γ          )  )
               {                                              }
                              (                            )
     ≈   -◟-R◝◜þr◞(1   -◟-(þγ◝◜∕℧-)◞   1 + (◟1--◝◜ ρ◞)(◟--þ◝γ◜∕℧-)◞ ∕2   )  .            (100 )
           >0           >0              <0        >0
and inspired by Kimball (1990) defining a term related to the excess of prudence over the logarithmic case,
        (       )
          ρ -  1
ω   =     -------  ,                                   (101 )
            2
(83) can be approximated by
             (                                                    )
                                        1
mˇ   ≈   1 +    -----------(-------------------------------)------                (102 )
                Γ ∕R -  þr  1 - ( þγ∕ ℧ )(1 - (-  þγ∕ ℧ )ω)  -  1
             (                                                        )
                --------------------------1----------------------------
     ≈   1 +                      (                                  )            (103 )
                (γ -  r) + (- þr)  1 +  (- þ γ∕℧ )(1 -  (- þ γ∕℧ )ω )
where negative signs have been preserved in front of the þr   and þ γ  terms as a reminder that the GIC and the RIC imply these terms are themselves negative (so that - þr   and -  þ γ  are positive). Ceteris paribus, an increase in relative risk aversion ρ  will increase ω  and thereby decrease the denominator of (103). This suggests that greater risk aversion will result in a larger target level of wealth.24

The formula also provides insight about how the human wealth effect works in equilibrium. All else equal, the human wealth effect is captured by the (γ - r)  term in the denominator of (103), and it is obvious that a larger value of γ  will result in a smaller target value for m  . But it is also clear that the size of the human wealth effect will depend on the magnitude of the patience and prudence contributions to the denominator, and that those terms can easily dominate the human wealth effect. This reduction in the human wealth effect is interesting because practitioners have known at least since Summers (1981) that the human wealth effect is implausibly large in the perfect foresight model.

For (103) to make sense, we need the denominator of the fraction to be a positive number; defining

ˆ
þ γ  =   þγ(1 -  (- þ γ∕℧ )ω ),                              (104 )
this means that we need:
(γ - r)  >   þr -  þrˆþ γ∕℧                                         (105 )
             (                 )
         =     ρ- 1 (r - ϑ) - r  - þr ˆþγ∕ ℧                        (106 )
               - 1
      γ  >   ρ   (r -  ϑ) -  þrˆþγ ∕℧                               (107 )
               - 1
      0  >   ρ --(r--  ϑ)----γ - þr(ˆþ γ∕℧ )                        (108 )
             ◟      ◝ ◜      ◞
                     þγ
                       ˆ
      0  >   þ γ - þr (þγ∕ ℧ ).                                    (109 )
But since the RIC guarantees þ  <  0
  r  and the GIC guarantees þ γ <  0  (which, in turn, guarantees ˆþ γ <  0  ), this condition must hold.25

The same set of derivations imply that we can replace the denominator in (103) with the negative of the RHS of (109), yielding a more compact expression for the target level of resources,

             (                  )
               --------1--------
ˇm   ≈   1 +       ˆ                                                    (110 )
               þr(þ γ∕℧ ) -  þγ
             (             1∕(-  þ )            )
    =   1 +    -------------------γ--------------  .                   (111 )
               1 +  (- þr∕℧ )(1 +  (- þ γ∕℧ )ω )
This formula makes plain the fact that an increase in either form of impatience, by increasing the denominator of the fraction in (111), will reduce the target level of assets.

We are now in position to discuss (103), understanding that the impatience conditions guarantee that its numerator is a positive number.

Two specializations of the formula are particularly useful. The first is the case where    ρ =  1  (logarithmic utility). In this case

þr   =   - ϑ                                           (112 )
þ    =   r - ϑ -  γ                                    (113 )
 γ
 ω   =   0                                             (114 )
and the approximation becomes
             (                                     )
               -----------------1------------------
ˇm   ≈   1 +    (γ -  r) +  ϑ(1 +  (γ +  ϑ -  r)∕℧ )                     (115 )
which neatly captures the effect of an increase in human wealth (via either increased γ  or reduced r  ), the effect of increased impatience ϑ  , or the effect of a reduction in unemployment risk ℧  in reducing target wealth.

The other useful case to consider is where r =  ϑ  but ρ >  1  . In this case, we have

þr  =   - ϑ                                                (116 )
þ   =   - γ                                                (117 )
 γ
ˆþ   =   - γ (1 -  (γ∕ ℧ )ω)                                (118 )
 γ
so that
             (                                           )
                                   1
ˇm   ≈   1 +    -------------------------------------------                 (119 )
               (γ -  r) + ϑ (1 +  (γ∕ ℧ )(1 - (γ ∕℧ )ω ))
where the additional term involving ω  in this equation captures the fact that an increase in the prudence term ω  shrinks the denominator and thereby boosts the target level of wealth.26

C Numerical Solution

C.1 The Consumption Function

To solve the model by the method of reverse shooting,27 we need ce
  t  as a function of ce
  t+1   . Starting with (22):

(  ce  )                    {        [ ( ce   ) ρ     ]}1 ∕ρ
   -t+1-   =   Γ - 1(R β )1∕ρ 1 +  ℧     -t+1-   -  1                               (120 )
    cet                                   cut+1
               (                                                   )
                                         e
        e      |  ----------------------ct+1-----------------------|
       ct  =   (               {        [(     e      )ρ     ]}1 ∕ρ)                (121 )
                  Γ - 1(R β)1∕ρ  1 + ℧     -u-ct+e1----   -  1
                                           κ (m t+1- 1)
                                {        [(        e        ) ρ     ]} - 1∕ρ
           =   Γ (R β)- 1∕ρce     1 + ℧      -----ct+1-------   - 1         .       (122 )
                            t+1              κu(me    -  1 )
                                                   t+1

Inverting (45), the reverse shooting equation for   e
m t  is

   e        - 1   e            e
m  t  =   R   (m  t+1  - 1 ) + ct.                             (123 )

The reverse shooting approximation will be more accurate if we use it to obtain estimates of the marginal propensity to consume as well. These are obtained by differentiating the consumption Euler equation with respect to mt  :

                              ℶ
                          ◜--◞◟---◝
        u ′(ce (mt ))  =   R β Γ 1- ρ Et [u′(c∙(mt+1 ))]                           (124 )
 ′′  e        e                      e           ′′  ∙          ∙
u  (c (mt ))κκκ  (mt )  =   ℶR  (1 - κκκ (mt ))Et [u (c  (mt+1 ))κκκ  (mt+1  )]        (125 )
so that defining, e.g., κet =  κκκe (mt )  we have
           κe  =   (1 -  κe) ℶR  (1∕u ′′(ce ))Et [u ′′(c∙   )κ∙  ]              (126 )
            t             t  ◟------------t--◝◜------t+1---t+1◞
                                            ≡♮t+1
            e
(1 + ♮t+1 )κt  =   ♮(t+1        )                                             (127 )
            e           ♮t+1
           κt  =     ---------   .                                           (128 )
                     1 +  ♮t+1

At the target level of me  we have

◜---------♮∕◞R◟ℶ---------◝         ◜------=◞1◟ ------◝
     ′′ e        ′′  ∙   ∙       /   ′′  e    ′′  e    e        ′′  u    ′′  e   u
(1∕u  (ˇc ))Et  [u  (c )κ  ] =   /℧  (u  (ˇc )∕u  (ˇc ))κ   + ℧ (u  (ˇc )∕u  (cˇ ))κ
so that
                e       u   e - ρ- 1 u
♮  =   ℶR  (/℧/κ   + ℧ (ˇc  ∕ˇc )     κ  )                          (129 )
yielding from (127) a quadratic equation in κe  :
(                                     )
 1 +  ℶR  (//℧ κe +  ℧ (ˇcu∕ ˇce)- ρ- 1κu) κe   =   ℶR  (//℧ κe +  ℧ (ˇcu∕ˇce )- ρ- 1 κu)    (130 )
which has one solution for κe  in the interval [0,1 ]  , which is the MPC at target wealth.28

The limiting MPC as consumption approaches zero,  e
¯κ ,  will also be useful; this is obtained by noting that utility in the employed state next year becomes asymptotically irrelevant as         ce
         t  approaches zero, so that

                             ♮
     ◜--------(---------------t+◞1◟-----------------------◝)
lim  ℶR  κe     /℧ (ce  ∕ce) - ρ- 1 + ℧ (cu ∕ce )- ρ- 1κu   =   ℶR  ℧ (cu  ∕ce )- ρ- 1κu
cet→0       t+1  /    t+1   t              t+1   t                        t+1   t
                                                                       u    e    e   e        e   - ρ- 1  u
                                                           =   ℶR  ℧ (κ  Ra t∕ (at(¯κ  ∕(1 -  ¯κ )))     )κ
                                                                       u           e    e  - ρ- 1 u
                                                           =   ℶR  ℧ (κ  R ((1 -  ¯κ )∕ ¯κ ))     κ
so that from (128) we have
                          (                                          )
                              ℶR  ℧ (κuR  ( (1 - ¯κe )∕¯κe ))- ρ- 1κu
¯κe ≡   lim  κκκe (mt )  =     -----------------------------------------            (131 )
      mt →0                 1 +  ℶR  ℧ (κuR  ((1 -  ¯κe)∕κ¯e ))- ρ- 1κu
which implicitly defines ¯κe  . An explicit solution is not available, but after parameter values have been defined a numerical rootfinder can calculate a solution almost instantly.

Finally, it will be useful to have an estimate of the curvature (second derivative) of the consumption function at the target. This can be obtained by a procedure analogous to the one used to obtain the MPC: differentiate the differentiated Euler equation (125) again and substitute the target values. Noting that κu′ =  0  we can obtain:

(κκκet)2u′′′(cet) + κκκet′ u ′′(cet) =
        {      e′     ′′  ∙    ∙                e 2 (      ∙   2  ′′′  ∙          ′′  e     e′ )}
    ℶR    (- κκκ t )Et [u (c t+1 )κκκt+1 ] + R (1 - κκκt)   Et [(κκκ t+1) u  (c t+1 )] + //℧u   (ct+1)κκκ t+1

                                                                                              (132 )
so that
         (                 (                                         )                 )
 e′        ℶR2  (1 -  κκκet)2 Et [(κκκ∙t+1 )2u′′′(c∙t+1)] + /℧/u  ′′(cet+1)κκκet′+1  -  (κκκet)2u ′′′(cet)
κκκt   =     -----------------------′′--e-------------′′--∙----∙-------------------------
                                 u  (ct) + ℶR  Et [u (c t+1 )κκκt+1 ]
which can be further simplified at the target because   e′         e′           e′
κκκt ( ˇm ) = κκκt+1( ˇm ) =  κ so that
  e′     (  ---ℶR2--(1----κe)2Et-[(κ∙)2u-′′′(c∙)] --(κe-)2u′′′(ˇce)----)
κ    =      u′′(ˇce) +  ℶR  E  [u ′′(c∙)κ ∙] - ℶR2  (1 -  κe)2//℧u ′′(ˇce)   .          (133 )
                            t

Another differentiation of (132) similarly allows the construction of a formula for the value of κe ′′ at the target mˇ  ; in principle, any number of derivatives can be constructed in this manner.29

Reverse shooting requires us to solve separately for an approximation to the consumption function above the steady state and another approximation below the steady state. Using the approximate steady-state  e
κ  and   e′
κ obtained above, we begin by picking a very small number for ▴ and then creating a Taylor approximation to the consumption function near the steady state:

  me`  =   ˇm  +  ▴                                                    (134 )
    t       e       e      2     e′      3      e′′
˜c(▴ )  =   ˇc  + ▴ κ  +  (▴  ∕2 )κ   + (▴  ∕6 )κ                       (135 )
and then iterate the reverse-shooting equations until we reach some period n  in which       e
    m `t- n  escapes some pre-specified interval [me,  ¯me ]  (where the natural value for me  is 1 because this is the m  that would be owned by a consumer who had saved nothing in the prior period and therefore is below any feasible value of m  that could be realized by an optimizing consumer). This generates a sequence of points all of which are on the consumption function. A parallel procedure (substituting - for +  in (134) and where appropriate in (135)) generates the sequence of points for the approximation below the steady state. Taken together with the already-derived characterization of the function at the target level of wealth, these points constitute the basis for a piecewise second-order interpolating approximation to the consumption function on the interval    e    e
[m- , ¯m  ]  .

C.2 The Value Function

As a preliminary, note that since u(xy ) =  u(x )y1- ρ  , value for an unemployed consumer is

  u           u          u        2     u
V t  =   u(C t ) + βu (C t+1) +  β  u(C t+2) +  ...                              (136 )
                (                             {         }1 - ρ     )
     =   u(Cu  )  1 +  β {(R β)1∕ρ}1 - ρ + β2   (Rβ )2∕ρ      +  ...             (137 )
             t
                (                    )
     =   u(Cu  )  ---------1---------                                           (138 )
             t    1 -  β (R β)(1∕ρ)- 1
                ◟----------◝◜---------◞
                           ≡𝔳
where the RIC guarantees that the denominator in the fraction is a positive number.

From this we can see that value for the normalized problem is similarly:

vu (m  )  =   u(κum   )𝔳.                                 (139 )
      t              t

Turning to the problem of the employed consumer, we have

 e               e        1- ρ    ∙
v (mt )  =   u (ct) + β Γ    Et [v (mt+1  )]                       (140 )
and at the target level of market resources this will be unchanging for a consumer who remains employed so that
                 e         e        1- ρ    e       u   e
               ˇv    =   u(ˇc ) +  βΓ     (//℧ ˇv  +  ℧v  (a  R ))               (141 )
(1 - β Γ 1- ρ℧/)ˇve  =   u(ˇce) +  βΓ 1- ρ℧vu (aeR  )                         (142 )
            /           (                            )
                 e        u(ˇce)-+--β-Γ 1--ρ℧vu-(aeR-)-
               ˇv    =                    1- ρ           .                   (143 )
                                (1 - β Γ    /℧/)

Given these facts, our recursion for generating a sequence of points on the consumption function can be used at the same time to generate corresponding points on the value function from

ve  =   u(ce ) + β Γ 1- ρ (/℧/ve  +  ℧vu  (aeR ) )                     (144 )
 t          t                t+1           t
with the first iteration point generated by numerical integration from
              ∫  ▴
  e       e          ′
v `t  =   ˇv  +      u (˜c (∙))d∙                               (145 )
                0

D The Algorithm

With the above results in hand, the model is solved and the various functions constructed as follows. Define ⋆t =  {met ,cet,κet,vet,κet′ } as a vector of points that characterizes a particular situation that an optimizing employed household might be in at any given point in time. Using the backwards-shooting functions derived above, for any point ⋆ `t  we can construct the sequence of points that must have led up to it: ⋆`t- 1   and ⋆ `t- 2   and so on. And using the approximations near the steady state like (135), we can construct a vector-valued function ∘∘∘ (▴ )  that generates, e.g., {mˇ +  ▴, ˜c(▴ ), ...} .

Now define an operator ⋅⋅⋅ as follows: ⋅⋅⋅ applied to some starting point ⋆t  uses the backwards dynamic equations defined above to produce a vector of points ⋆t- 1, ⋆t- 2,...  consistent with the model until the met- n  that is produced goes outside of the pre-defined bounds for solving the problem.

We can merge the points below the steady state with the steady state with the points above the steady state to produce ...
 ⋆ =  ⋅⋅⋅ (∘∘∘(- ε )) ∪ ∘∘∘(0) ∪  ⋅⋅⋅(∘∘∘ (ε))  . These points can then be used to generate appropriate interpolating approximations to the consumption function and other desired functions.

Designate, e.g., the vector of points on the consumption function generated in this manner by ...
⋆ [c]  , so that

                                          (                   e      e′     )
                                             m [1]    {c[1 ], κ [1],κ  [1]}
  ...      ...    ...  e  ...   e′  ⊺  ⊺      |  m [2]    {c[2 ], κe[2],κe ′[2]}  |
{ ⋆ [m ],{ ⋆ [c ], ⋆ [κ ],⋆ [κ  ]} }    =   |(                                 |)        (146 )
                                              ...              ...
                                            m [N  ] {c [N ],κe[N  ], κe′[N  ]}
where N  is the number of points that have been generated by the merger of the backward shooting points described above.

The object (146) is not an arbitrary example; it reflects a set of values that uniquely define a fourth order piecewise polynomial spline such that at every point in the set the polynomial matches the level and first derivative included in the list. Standard numerical mathematics software can produce the interpolating function with this input; for example, the syntax in Mathematica is simply

                             ...      ...   ...  e  ...  e′  ⊺ ⊺
cE   =   Interpolation     [{ ⋆ [m  ],{ ⋆[c], ⋆[κ  ], ⋆ [κ  ]}  } ].             (147 )
which creates a function cE that is a C4   interpolating polynomial connecting these points.

The reverse shooting algorithm terminates at some finite maximum point m¯  , but for completeness it is useful to have an approximation to the consumption function that is reasonably well behaved for any mˇ  no matter how large.30

Since we know that the consumption function in the presence of uncertainty asymptotes to the perfect foresight function, we adopt the following approach. Defining the level of precautionary saving as31

/c(m  )  =   ¯c(m ) -  c(m ),                                (148 )
we know (see the discussion below in appendix section E) that
 lim   /c(m  ) = 0.                                       (149 )
m → ∞

Defining ⃗m  =  m  - m¯  , a convenient functional form to postulate for the propensity to precautionary-save is

             ϕ0- ϕ1⃗m    γ0- γ1⃗m
/c(m )  =   e        +  e                                     (150 )
with derivatives
  ′                ϕ0- ϕ1⃗m       γ0- γ1⃗m
 /c (m )  =   - ϕ1e         -  γ1e                                 (151 )
  ′′              2 ϕ0- ϕ1⃗m     2  γ0- γ1⃗m
/c  (m )  =     ϕ 1e        +  γ1e                                 (152 )
/c′′′(m )  =   - ϕ3 eϕ0- ϕ1⃗m -  γ3e γ0- γ1⃗m.                         (153 )
                 1             1

Evaluated at ¯m  (for which /c  and its derivatives will have numerical values assigned by the reverse-shooting solution method described above), this is a system of four equations in four unknowns and, though nonlinear, can be easily solved for values of the ϕ  and γ  coefficients that match the level and first three derivatives of the “true” /c  function.32

E Modified Formulas For Case Where Γ  ≥ R

The text asserts that if Γ  <  R  the consumption function for a finite-horizon employed consumer approaches the ¯ct(m  )  function that is optimal for a perfect-foresight consumer with the same horizon,

lmim↑∞ ¯ct(m ) -  ct(m )  =   0.                               (154 )

This proposition can be proven by careful analysis of the consumption Euler equation, noting that as m  approaches infinity the proportion of consumption will be financed out of (uncertain) labor income approaches zero, and that the magnitude of the precautionary effect is proportional to the square of the proportion of such consumption financed out of uncertain labor income.

A footnote also claims that for employed consumers, c (m )  approaches a different, but still well-defined, limit even if Γ ≥  R  , so long as the impatience condition holds.

It turns out that the limit in question is the one defined by the solution to a perfect foresight problem with liquidity constraints. A semi-analytical solution does exist in this case, but it requires formidable notation and analysis to present and understand, so the details are not presented here. A continuous-time treatement can be found in Park (2006).

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