Bailing out the Kids: New Evidence on Informal Insurance from one Billion Bank Transfers

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

Bailing out the Kids: New Evidence on Informal Insurance from one Billion Bank Transfers. / Andersen, Asger Lau; Johannesen, Niels; Sheridan, Adam.

2020.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Andersen, AL, Johannesen, N & Sheridan, A 2020 'Bailing out the Kids: New Evidence on Informal Insurance from one Billion Bank Transfers'. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3624022

APA

Andersen, A. L., Johannesen, N., & Sheridan, A. (2020). Bailing out the Kids: New Evidence on Informal Insurance from one Billion Bank Transfers. CEBI Working Paper Series Nr. 19/20 https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3624022

Vancouver

Andersen AL, Johannesen N, Sheridan A. Bailing out the Kids: New Evidence on Informal Insurance from one Billion Bank Transfers. 2020 jul. 7. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3624022

Author

Andersen, Asger Lau ; Johannesen, Niels ; Sheridan, Adam. / Bailing out the Kids: New Evidence on Informal Insurance from one Billion Bank Transfers. 2020. (CEBI Working Paper Series; Nr. 19/20).

Bibtex

@techreport{f332aeb808e049feaacb6379215387a2,
title = "Bailing out the Kids: New Evidence on Informal Insurance from one Billion Bank Transfers",
abstract = "We combine transaction-level data from the largest retail bank in Denmark and individual-level data from government registers to study informal insurance within social networks. Accounting for transfers in cash (money transfers) and in kind (cohabitation), we estimate that family and friends jointly replace around 7 cents of the marginal dollar lost within the bottom income decile, but much less at higher income levels. We document that informal insurance covers other adverse events than income losses: expenditure shocks, family ruptures and financial distress. Parents appear to be the key providers of informal insurance with a small amount of insurance coming from siblings and virtually none from grandparents and friends. Replacement rates vary monotonically with parent economic resources.",
keywords = "informal insurance, altruism, private transfers, risk sharing",
author = "Andersen, {Asger Lau} and Niels Johannesen and Adam Sheridan",
year = "2020",
month = jul,
day = "7",
doi = "10.2139/ssrn.3624022",
language = "English",
series = "CEBI Working Paper Series",
number = "19/20",
type = "WorkingPaper",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Bailing out the Kids: New Evidence on Informal Insurance from one Billion Bank Transfers

AU - Andersen, Asger Lau

AU - Johannesen, Niels

AU - Sheridan, Adam

PY - 2020/7/7

Y1 - 2020/7/7

N2 - We combine transaction-level data from the largest retail bank in Denmark and individual-level data from government registers to study informal insurance within social networks. Accounting for transfers in cash (money transfers) and in kind (cohabitation), we estimate that family and friends jointly replace around 7 cents of the marginal dollar lost within the bottom income decile, but much less at higher income levels. We document that informal insurance covers other adverse events than income losses: expenditure shocks, family ruptures and financial distress. Parents appear to be the key providers of informal insurance with a small amount of insurance coming from siblings and virtually none from grandparents and friends. Replacement rates vary monotonically with parent economic resources.

AB - We combine transaction-level data from the largest retail bank in Denmark and individual-level data from government registers to study informal insurance within social networks. Accounting for transfers in cash (money transfers) and in kind (cohabitation), we estimate that family and friends jointly replace around 7 cents of the marginal dollar lost within the bottom income decile, but much less at higher income levels. We document that informal insurance covers other adverse events than income losses: expenditure shocks, family ruptures and financial distress. Parents appear to be the key providers of informal insurance with a small amount of insurance coming from siblings and virtually none from grandparents and friends. Replacement rates vary monotonically with parent economic resources.

KW - informal insurance

KW - altruism

KW - private transfers

KW - risk sharing

U2 - 10.2139/ssrn.3624022

DO - 10.2139/ssrn.3624022

M3 - Working paper

T3 - CEBI Working Paper Series

BT - Bailing out the Kids: New Evidence on Informal Insurance from one Billion Bank Transfers

ER -

ID: 248805414