Temptation and Self-Control: Some Evidence from the Consumer Expenditure Survey
This paper empirically estimates a balanced-growth consistent, dynamic, structural model of intertemporal consumption and asset pricing that allows for, but does not assume, the Gul-Pesendorfer preferences of temptation and self-control, using synthetic panel data constructed from the Consumer Expenditure Survey. One novelty of our model is that the cross-sectional distribution of wealth-consumption ratio is a potentially important determinant for the implied pricing kernel, additional to the cross-sectional distribution of consumption growth, while the importance of this additional factor depends on the strength of temptation and self-control. The estimates that we obtain provide evidence supporting the existence of temptation and self-control in preferences. With reasonable precision, we estimate a significant present-biased temptation strength, and we reject the null hypothesis of no temptation at common confidence levels. We explore the quantitative implications of the self-control problems for equity premium, risk-free rate, and asset price volatility.
Year of publication: |
2005-01
|
---|---|
Authors: | Huang, Kevin X. D. ; Liu, Zheng ; Zhu, Qi |
Institutions: | Department of Economics, Emory University |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Temptation and self-control : some evidence from the consumer expenditure survey
Huang, Kevin X. D., (2005)
-
Temptation and self-control : some evidence and applications
Huang, Kevin X. D., (2006)
-
Temptation and Self-Control : Some Evidence and Applications
Huang, Kevin X. D., (2008)
- More ...