Minimum Consumption and Transitional Dynamics in Wealth Distribution. Álvarez-Peláez, M. J. & Díaz, A. 52(3):633–667.
Minimum Consumption and Transitional Dynamics in Wealth Distribution [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
This paper investigates quantitatively how initial wealth holding differences across households are propagated through time in a one sector growth model economy. A key feature of the model is that household consumption cannot fall below a positive level each period. The existence of a minimum consumption requirement implies that the Intertemporal Elasticity of Substitution not only differs across households but also changes differently over time. This model is calibrated to match some key aggregate statistics of the U.S. economy. We find that, as in the data, the wealth distribution in our benchmark model economy exhibits a (brief) period of increasing inequality, a short period in which inequality diminishes and a steady level of inequality along the balanced growth path. However, our model illustrates that the evolution of inequality is very sensitive to the length of the transition path. Additionally, our model predicts an upsurge in wealth inequality following the productivity slowdown in the 1970s.
@article{alvarez-pelaezMinimumConsumptionTransitional2005,
  title = {Minimum {{Consumption}} and {{Transitional Dynamics}} in {{Wealth Distribution}}},
  author = {Álvarez-Peláez, María J. and Díaz, Antonia},
  date = {2005},
  journaltitle = {Journal of Monetary Economics},
  volume = {52},
  number = {3},
  pages = {633--667},
  issn = {03043932},
  doi = {10.1016/j.jmoneco.2004.06.004},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmoneco.2004.06.004},
  abstract = {This paper investigates quantitatively how initial wealth holding differences across households are propagated through time in a one sector growth model economy. A key feature of the model is that household consumption cannot fall below a positive level each period. The existence of a minimum consumption requirement implies that the Intertemporal Elasticity of Substitution not only differs across households but also changes differently over time. This model is calibrated to match some key aggregate statistics of the U.S. economy. We find that, as in the data, the wealth distribution in our benchmark model economy exhibits a (brief) period of increasing inequality, a short period in which inequality diminishes and a steady level of inequality along the balanced growth path. However, our model illustrates that the evolution of inequality is very sensitive to the length of the transition path. Additionally, our model predicts an upsurge in wealth inequality following the productivity slowdown in the 1970s.},
  keywords = {Impacts of Wealth Inequality},
  file = {C\:\\Users\\lukis\\AppData\\Roaming\\Zotero\\Zotero\\Profiles\\h20ej2eu.default\\zotero\\storage\\2X6FEDYX\\Álvarez-Peláez_Díaz_2005_Minimum Consumption and Transitional Dynamics in Wealth Distribution.pdf}
}

Downloads: 0