posted on 1979-01-01, 00:00authored byKjetil Storesletten, Chris I Telmer, Amir Yaron
A striking feature of U.S. data on income and consumption is that inequality increases
with age. This paper asks if individual-specific earnings risk can provide a
coherent explanation. We find that it can. We construct an overlapping generations
general equilibrium model in which households face uninsurable earnings shocks over
the course of their lifetimes. Earnings inequality is exogenous and is calibrated to
match data from the U.S. Panel Study on Income Dynamics. Consumption inequality
is endogenous and matches well data from the U.S. Consumer Expenditure Survey.
The total risk households face is decomposed into that realized before entering the
labor market and that realized throughout the working years. In welfare terms, the
latter is found to be more important than the former.