Income Uncertainty and Precautionary Savings Before and After the Great Recession

Income Uncertainty and Precautionary Savings Before and After the Great Recession
Author: Catherine Willemin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 130
Release: 2013
Genre: Political planning
ISBN:

Precautionary savings is important in helping households to weather short-term fluctuations in income and expenses. While many papers have previously estimated the effect of income uncertainty on savings, this paper examines the possibility that the precautionary savings motive changes in response to the macroeconomic environment. This paper uses data from the Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF) before and after the most recent recession to estimate the effect of income uncertainty on emergency savings through the use of logit and OLS regression models. The results show that after the recession, people without income certainty for the following year see their savings decline significantly; those with income certainty for the following year see their savings stay flat or even increase. This suggests that there may be an additional precautionary savings motivation that is cued by the recession as people become more alert to the potential need for emergency savings. However, only some groups are actually able to act on this motive to maintain or increase savings, since some are already feeling the negative effects of the recession on the household level. This paper generally highlights the need for more policy attention to the gap in short-term emergency savings. Additionally, the results suggest that particular attention should be focused on helping people take advantage of good financial years to build an emergency savings buffer.

Dissecting Saving Dynamics

Dissecting Saving Dynamics
Author: Mr.Christopher Carroll
Publisher: International Monetary Fund
Total Pages: 47
Release: 2012-09-01
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1475505698

We argue that the U.S. personal saving rate’s long stability (from the 1960s through the early 1980s), subsequent steady decline (1980s - 2007), and recent substantial increase (2008 - 2011) can all be interpreted using a parsimonious ‘buffer stock’ model of optimal consumption in the presence of labor income uncertainty and credit constraints. Saving in the model is affected by the gap between ‘target’ and actual wealth, with the target wealth determined by credit conditions and uncertainty. An estimated structural version of the model suggests that increased credit availability accounts for most of the saving rate’s long-term decline, while fluctuations in net wealth and uncertainty capture the bulk of the business-cycle variation.

Income Uncertainty, Precautionary Saving, and Social Insurance

Income Uncertainty, Precautionary Saving, and Social Insurance
Author: Matthew Joyce
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2022
Genre:
ISBN:

Our estimates indicate that 24% of net wealth is attributed to precautionary savings in Australia. Moreover, across the income distribution, we find that low-income households have the highest fraction of their wealth accumulation explained by precautionary motives. These results for Australia are at odds with the estimates of precautionary wealth in the United States where related studies find that low-income households hold low levels of precautionary savings. Using a simple theoretical model, we show that differences in means-tested social insurance programs can rationalize these large differences in our empirical results.

Household Income Uncertainties Over Three Decades

Household Income Uncertainties Over Three Decades
Author: James Feigenbaum
Publisher: DIANE Publishing
Total Pages: 39
Release: 2011-08
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1437987435

Studies the trend in household income uncertainty using a novel approach that measures income uncertainty as the variance of forecast errors at each future horizon separately without imposing parametric restrictions on the underlying income shocks. Household income uncertainty has risen significantly and persistently since the early 1970s. Their measure of near-future uncertainty in total family non-capital income rose 40% between 1971 and 2002. This rising uncertainty is likely due to the increase in variances of both persistent and transitory income shocks. The increase was most pronounced among single-earner households and high-income households. Charts and tables. This is a print on demand report.

The Empirical Importance of Precautionary Saving

The Empirical Importance of Precautionary Saving
Author: Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas
Publisher:
Total Pages: 32
Release: 2001
Genre: Economics
ISBN:

One of the basic motives for saving is the accumulation of wealth to insure future welfare. Both introspection and extant research on consumption insurance find that people face substantial risks that they do not fairly pool. In theory, the consumption and wealth accumulation of price-taking households in an economy with incomplete markets differs substantially from the behavior of these same households in the equivalent economy with complete-markets. The question we address in this article is whether we find this difference to be large in practice. What is the empirical importance of precautionary saving? We provide a simple decomposition that characterizes the importance of precautionary saving in the U.S. economy. We use this decomposition as an organizing framework to present four main findings: (a) the concavity of the consumption policy rule, (b) the importance of precautionary saving for life-cycle saving and wealth accumulation, (c) the contribution of changes in risk to fluctuations in aggregate consumption and (d) the significant impact of incomplete markets on aggregate fluctuations in calibrated general equilibrium models. We conclude with directions for future research.