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5 - Young households' saving and the life cycle of opportunities. Evidence from Japan and Italy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2010

Albert Ando
Affiliation:
University of Pennsylvania
Luigi Guiso
Affiliation:
Bank of Italy, Rome
Ignazio Visco
Affiliation:
Bank of Italy, Rome
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Summary

Introduction

The earnings profile appears to rise steeply with age in most countries, especially those with rapid growth such as Italy and Japan. It is therefore natural to expect that, because of the consumption smoothing principle, young people will dissave.

Using microdata for Japan and Italy, we show that families and singles both save and accumulate net worth throughout their working lives, even while they are quite young and their current incomes are lower than future incomes.

We are thus faced with the question as to why young people do not dissave. This is a shift in emphasis from recent literature, in which much effort has been devoted to devising modifications to the life–cycle theory that could accommodate the relatively low propensity to dissave by older, retired families.

The mere lack of dissaving by very young households may be explained by the presence of liquidity constraints or myopia. The ingenious interaction of liquidity constraints with uncertainty recently proposed by Deaton (1991) can, within a buffer stock context, explain a limited amount of saving; it is, nonetheless, probably inadequate to explain the significant saving by very young households with relatively low incomes.

We propose instead an explanation based on the hypothesis that, for very young households, due to the expectation of (future) consumption opportunities not available today, higher future income might be accompanied by larger needs.

Type
Chapter
Information
Saving and the Accumulation of Wealth
Essays on Italian Household and Government Saving Behavior
, pp. 163 - 187
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1994

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