Household debt and uncertainty: private consumption after the Great Recession

Household debt and uncertainty: private consumption after the Great Recession

Series: Working Papers. 1415.

Author: Ángel Estrada, Daniel Garrote, Eva Valdeolivas and Javier Vallés.

Published in : Monetaria, 3, January - June 2015, 71-109Opens in new window

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Household debt and uncertainty: private consumption after the Great Recession (590 KB)

Abstract

Household debt in many advanced economies has increased significantly since the 1980s and accelerated in the years prior to the Great Recession, resulting in an aggregate reduction of saving rates in the developed economies. Some of those economies are now deleveraging, which may be affecting their recovery. We try to disentangle how these financial developments influence private consumption in a panel of OECD countries, after controlling for the traditional determinants (income, net financial and non-financial wealth, and interest rates). Consistent with the changes in the distribution of financial constraints, we find that aggregate consumption is also driven by the dynamics of housing debt accumulation and deleveraging. Precautionary savings, due to labour income uncertainty, have also influenced household decisions especially, during the 2007-2009 period.

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