Imperfect Risk Sharing and the Business Cycle

The Quarterly Journal of Economics

Volume 138, Issue 3 August 2023

Link to Article

https://academic.oup.com/qje/advance-article/doi/10.1093/qje/qjad013/7080182?login=true

Abstract

This article studies the macroeconomic implications of imperfect risk sharing implied by a class of New Keynesian models with heterogeneous agents. The models in this class can be equivalently represented as a representative-agent economy with wedges. These wedges are functions of households’ consumption shares and relative wages, and they identify the key cross-sectional moments that govern the impact of households’ heterogeneity on aggregate variables. We measure the wedges using U.S. household-level data and combine them with a representative-agent economy to perform counterfactuals. We find that deviations from perfect risk sharing implied by this class of models account for only 7% of output volatility on average but can have sizable output effects when nominal interest rates reach their lower bound.

Article PDF

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