HKS Affiliated Authors

Excerpt

February 29, 2024, Paper: "This paper studies how and why households adjust their spending, saving, and borrow ing in response to transitory income shocks. We leverage new large-scale survey data to rst quantitatively assess households intertemporal marginal propensities to consume (MPCs) and deleverage (MPDs) (the how), and second to dive into the motivations and decision-making processes across households (the why ). The combination of the quantitative estimation of household response dynamics with a qualitative exploration of the mental models employed during nancial decisions provides a more complete view of household behavior. Our nd ings are as follows. First, we validate the reliability of surveys in predicting actual economic behaviors using a new approach called cross-validation, which compares the responses to hypothetical financial scenarios with observed actions from past studies. Participants predicted reactions closely align with real-life behaviors. Second, we show that MPCs are significantly higher immediately following an income shock and diminish over time, with cumulative MPCs over a year showing significant variability. However, MPDs play a critical role in household financial adjustments and display significantly more cross-sectional heterogeneity. Neither is easily explained by socioeconomic or financial characteristics alone, and the explanatory power is improved by adding psychological factors, past experiences, and expectations. Third, using specifically-designed survey questions, we find that there is a broad range of motivations be hind households financial decisions and identify four household types using machine learning: Strongly Constrained, Precautionary, Quasi-Smoothers, and Spenders. Similar financial actions stem from diverse reasons, challenging the predictability of financial behavior solely based on socioeconomic and financial characteristics. Finally, we use our findings to address some puzzles in household finance."