Income and Consumption Smoothing among US States: Regions or Clubs?

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

Income and Consumption Smoothing among US States : Regions or Clubs? / Sørensen, Bent; Yosha, Oved.

Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen, 1996.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Sørensen, B & Yosha, O 1996 'Income and Consumption Smoothing among US States: Regions or Clubs?' Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen.

APA

Sørensen, B., & Yosha, O. (1996). Income and Consumption Smoothing among US States: Regions or Clubs? Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen.

Vancouver

Sørensen B, Yosha O. Income and Consumption Smoothing among US States: Regions or Clubs? Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen. 1996.

Author

Sørensen, Bent ; Yosha, Oved. / Income and Consumption Smoothing among US States : Regions or Clubs?. Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen, 1996.

Bibtex

@techreport{a6ff12d0e91d11dcbee902004c4f4f50,
title = "Income and Consumption Smoothing among US States: Regions or Clubs?",
abstract = "We quantify the amount of cross-sectional income and consumption smoothing achieved within subgroups of states, such as regions or clubs, e.g. the club of rich states. We find that there is much income smoothing between as well as within regions. By contrast, consumption smoothing occurs mainly within regions but not between regions. This suggests that capital markets transcend regional barriers while credit markets are regional in their nature. Smoothing within the club of rich states is accomplished mainly via capital markets whereas consumption smoothing is dominant within the club of poor states. The fraction of a shock to gross state products smoothed by the federal tax-transfer system is the same for various regions and other clubs of states. We calculate the scope for consumption smoothing within various regions and clubs, finding that most gains from risk sharing can be achieved within US regions. Since a considerable fraction of shocks to gross state product are smoothed within regions, we conclude that existing markets achieve a substantial fraction of the potential welfare gains from interstate income and consumption smoothing. Nonetheless, non-negligible welfare gains may be obtained from further improvement of risk sharing institutions",
author = "Bent S{\o}rensen and Oved Yosha",
note = "JEL Classification: E20, F15, H71",
year = "1996",
language = "English",
publisher = "Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen",
address = "Denmark",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Income and Consumption Smoothing among US States

T2 - Regions or Clubs?

AU - Sørensen, Bent

AU - Yosha, Oved

N1 - JEL Classification: E20, F15, H71

PY - 1996

Y1 - 1996

N2 - We quantify the amount of cross-sectional income and consumption smoothing achieved within subgroups of states, such as regions or clubs, e.g. the club of rich states. We find that there is much income smoothing between as well as within regions. By contrast, consumption smoothing occurs mainly within regions but not between regions. This suggests that capital markets transcend regional barriers while credit markets are regional in their nature. Smoothing within the club of rich states is accomplished mainly via capital markets whereas consumption smoothing is dominant within the club of poor states. The fraction of a shock to gross state products smoothed by the federal tax-transfer system is the same for various regions and other clubs of states. We calculate the scope for consumption smoothing within various regions and clubs, finding that most gains from risk sharing can be achieved within US regions. Since a considerable fraction of shocks to gross state product are smoothed within regions, we conclude that existing markets achieve a substantial fraction of the potential welfare gains from interstate income and consumption smoothing. Nonetheless, non-negligible welfare gains may be obtained from further improvement of risk sharing institutions

AB - We quantify the amount of cross-sectional income and consumption smoothing achieved within subgroups of states, such as regions or clubs, e.g. the club of rich states. We find that there is much income smoothing between as well as within regions. By contrast, consumption smoothing occurs mainly within regions but not between regions. This suggests that capital markets transcend regional barriers while credit markets are regional in their nature. Smoothing within the club of rich states is accomplished mainly via capital markets whereas consumption smoothing is dominant within the club of poor states. The fraction of a shock to gross state products smoothed by the federal tax-transfer system is the same for various regions and other clubs of states. We calculate the scope for consumption smoothing within various regions and clubs, finding that most gains from risk sharing can be achieved within US regions. Since a considerable fraction of shocks to gross state product are smoothed within regions, we conclude that existing markets achieve a substantial fraction of the potential welfare gains from interstate income and consumption smoothing. Nonetheless, non-negligible welfare gains may be obtained from further improvement of risk sharing institutions

M3 - Working paper

BT - Income and Consumption Smoothing among US States

PB - Department of Economics, University of Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 2982708