The Econometric Society An International Society for the Advancement of Economic Theory in its Relation to Statistics and Mathematics
Home Contacts
Econometrica

New Journals

Econometrica
Editorial Board
Journal News

Monograph Series

November 1987 - Volume 55 Issue 6 Page 1249 - 1273


p.1249


Does Saving Anticipate Declining Labor Income? An Alternative Test of the Permanent Income Hypothesis

John Y. Campbell

Abstract

The permanent income hypothesis implies that people save because they rationally expect their permanent income to decline; they save "for a rainy day." It follows that saving should be at lease as good a predictor of declines in labor income as any other forecast that can be constructed from publicly available information. The paper tests this hitherto ignored implication of the permanent income hypothesis, using quarterly aggregate data for the period 1953-84 in the United States. By contrast with much of the recent literature, the results here are valid when income is stationary in first differences rather than levels.

Full content Login                                    

Note: to view the fulltext of the article, please login first and then click the "full content" button. If you are based at a subscribing Institution or Library or if you have a separate access to JSTOR/Wiley Online Library please click on the "Institutional access" button.
Prev | All Articles | Next
Go to top
Membership



Email me my password
Join/Renew
Change your address
Register for password
Require login:
Amend your profile
E-mail Alerting
The Society
About the Society
Society News
Society Reports
Officers
Fellows
Members
Regions
Meetings
Future Meetings
Past Meetings
Meeting Announcements
Google
web this site
   
Wiley-Blackwell
Site created and maintained by Wiley-Blackwell.
Comments? Contact customsiteshelp@wiley.com
To view our Privacy Policy, please click here.