72 results on '"Jonathan A. Parker"'
Search Results
2. Asymmetric Consumption Smoothing
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Jonathan A. Parker, Hoonsuk Park, Itzhak Ben-David, and Brian Baugh
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Consumption (economics) ,Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,Mental accounting ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Consumption smoothing ,Monetary economics ,Payment ,computer.software_genre ,News aggregator ,Market liquidity ,Credit card ,Debt ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,050207 economics ,computer ,media_common - Abstract
Analyzing account-level data from an account aggregator, we find that households increase consumption when they receive expected tax refunds, as if they face liquidity constraints. However, these same households smooth consumption when making payments in other years, primarily by transferring funds among liquid accounts. Even households carrying credit card debt smooth consumption when making payments, and even highly liquid households spend out of refunds. This behavior is inconsistent with pure liquidity constraints or hand-to-mouth behavior and is most consistent with a mental accounting life-cycle model. (JEL D12, E21, G51, H24, H31)
- Published
- 2021
3. Dissolution of Metals from Biosolid-Treated Soils by Organic Acid Mixtures
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Won-Pyo Park, Bon-Jun Koo, Andrew C. Chang, Thomas E. Ferko, Jonathan R. Parker, Tracy H. Ward, Stephanie V. Lara, and Chau M. Nguyen
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Agriculture (General) ,S1-972 ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 - Abstract
Results for the solubilization of metals from biosolid- (BSL-) treated soils by simulated organic acid-based synthetic root exudates (OA mixtures) of differing composition and concentrations are presented. This study used two BSL-treated Romona soils and a BSL-free Romona soil control that were collected from experimental plots of a long-term BSL land application experiment. Results indicate that the solubility of metals in a BSL-treated soil with 0.01 and 0.1 M OA mixtures was significantly higher than that of 0.001 M concentrations. Differences in composition of OAs caused by BSL treatment and the length of growing periods did not affect the solubility of metals. There were no significant differences in organic composition and metals extracted for plants grown at 2, 4, 8, 12, and 16 weeks. The amount of metals extracted tended to decrease with the increase of the pH. Results of metal dissolution kinetics indicate two-stage metal dissolution. A rapid dissolution of metals occurred in the first 15 minutes. For Cd, Cu, Ni, and Zn, approximately 60–70% of the metals were released in the first 15 minutes while the initial releases for Cr and Pb were approximately 30% of the total. It was then followed by a slow but steady release of additional metals over 48 hours.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Accelerator or Brake? Cash for Clunkers, Household Liquidity, and Aggregate Demand
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Daniel Green, Jonathan A. Parker, Brian T. Melzer, and Arcenis Rojas
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Labour economics ,Loan repayment ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Allowance (money) ,Subsidy ,Monetary economics ,Market liquidity ,Cash ,Brake ,Economics ,Household income ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,Aggregate demand ,media_common - Abstract
This paper evaluates the Car Allowance Rebate System (CARS ) by comparing the vehicle purchases and disposals of households with eligible “clunkers” to those of households with similar but ineligible vehicles. CARS caused roughly 500,000 purchases during the program period. The provision of liquidity, through a rebate usable as a down payment, was critical in generating this large response. Participation was rare among households that owned clunkers with outstanding loans, which required loan repayment. This decline in participation is attributed to households’ preference for lower down payments and distinguished from the effects of income, other indebtedness, and the program subsidy. (JEL E23, E62, G51, H24, H31)
- Published
- 2020
5. Comments and Discussion
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Jonathan A. Parker
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Economics and Econometrics ,General Business, Management and Accounting - Published
- 2020
6. The Local Aggregate Effects of Minimum Wage Increases
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Daniel Cooper, Maria Jose Luengo-Prado, and Jonathan A. Parker
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Consumption (economics) ,Inflation ,Food away from home ,Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Aggregate (data warehouse) ,Monetary economics ,Accounting ,Debt ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Debt ratio ,050207 economics ,Minimum wage ,Finance ,Household debt ,media_common - Abstract
© 2019 The Ohio State University Using variation in minimum wages across cities and controlling for differences in business-cycle factors and long-run local economic trends, we find that following minimum wage increases, both, prices and nominal spending rise modestly. These gains are larger for certain subcategories of goods such as food away from home and in locations where low-wage workers account for a larger share of employment. Further, minimum wage increases are associated with reduced total debt among households with low credit scores, higher auto debt, and increased access to credit.
- Published
- 2019
7. Reported Effects versus Revealed-Preference Estimates: Evidence from the Propensity to Spend Tax Rebates
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Nicholas S. Souleles and Jonathan A. Parker
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Labour economics ,Stimulus (economics) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Payment ,Market liquidity ,Survey methodology ,Revealed preference ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Demographic economics ,050207 economics ,050205 econometrics ,General Environmental Science ,media_common - Abstract
We evaluate the consistency of two methods for estimating the effect of an economic policy: (i) asking people how the policy caused them to change their behavior (reported effects) and (ii) inferring this change using data on behavior and differences in treatment across people (revealed-preference estimates). Both methods are widely used to measure spending caused by increases in liquidity. Using federal stimulus payments disbursed quasi-randomly in 2008, we find larger revealed-preference estimates of spending propensities for households who report greater spending responses, and the methods produce similar average propensities. But evidence is mixed on the relationship between spending propensities and liquidity. (JEL C83, D14, D91, E62, H24, H31)
- Published
- 2019
8. Revenue Collapses and the Consumption of Small Business Owners in the Early Stages of the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Olivia S. Kim, Antoinette Schoar, and Jonathan A. Parker
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Consumption (economics) ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,business.industry ,Pandemic ,Consumer spending ,Liberian dollar ,Revenue ,Demographic economics ,Business ,Small business ,health care economics and organizations ,Market liquidity - Abstract
Using detailed transaction-level data from financial accounts, this paper shows that the revenues of small businesses and the consumption spending of their owners both decline by roughly 40% following the declaration of the national emergency in March 2020. However, through May 2020, the vast majority of this average decline in revenues is due to national factors rather than to variation in local infection rates or policies. Further, there is only a modest propensity for business owners to cut consumption in response to their individual business losses: Comparing owners in the same county but whose businesses operate in industries differentially impacted by local infections and state-level policies, we show that each dollar of revenue loss leads to a 1.6 cent decline in the consumption of the owner at this early stage of the pandemic. This limited passthrough appears to be explained by three factors: (1) the liquidity of households and businesses entering the crisis – consumption is twice as responsive for small business owners who operate with low liquidity; (2) emergency Federal programs – median account balances in both business and checking accounts decline in March but rebound in April and May when the transfer programs begin; (3) pandemic induced declines in the ability to spend on consumption – spending on travel, restaurants or personal services dropped dramatically.
- Published
- 2020
9. Retail Financial Innovation and Stock Market Dynamics: The Case of Target Date Funds
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Yang Sun, Antoinette Schoar, and Jonathan A. Parker
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Financial innovation ,Bond ,Economics ,Contrarian ,Target date fund ,Portfolio ,Stock market ,Trading strategy ,Monetary economics ,Stock (geology) - Abstract
The rise of Target Date Funds (TDFs) has moved a significant share of retail investors into contrarian trading strategies that rebalance between stocks and bonds so as to maintain age-appropriate portfolio shares. We show that i) TDFs actively rebalance within a few months following differential asset-class returns to maintain stable portfolio shares, ii), this rebalancing drives contrarian rebalancing flows across funds held by TDFs, iii) investors do not move funds into or out of TDFs to offset these flows, and iv) these flows impact the prices of stocks. Across otherwise similar stocks, those with higher (indirect) TDF ownership experience lower returns after higher market-wide performance, a results that holds when looking only at variation in TDF ownership driven by S&P index inclusion. Consistent with this price impact, the stock market exhibits more reversion at the monthly frequency during the recent TDF era. Together, our results suggest that continued growth in TDFs may affect return dynamics and the relation between stock and bond returns.
- Published
- 2020
10. A Dynamic Theory of Lending Standards
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Michael J. Fishman, Ludwig Straub, and Jonathan A. Parker
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Government ,Incentive ,Strategic complements ,Loan ,Download ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Developing country ,Quality (business) ,Business ,Monetary economics ,Externality ,media_common - Abstract
We develop a tractable dynamic model of credit markets in which lending standards and the quality of potential borrowers are endogenous. Competitive banks privately choose their lending standards: whether to pay a cost to screen out some unprofitable borrowers. Lending standards have negative externalities and are dynamic strategic complements: tighter screening worsens the future pool of borrowers for all banks and increases their incentives to screen in the future. Lending standards can amplify and prolong temporary downturns, affecting lending volume, credit spreads, and default rates. We characterize constrained-optimal policy which can generally be implemented as a government loan insurance program. When markets recover, they may do so only slowly, a phenomenon we call “slow thawing.” Finally, we show that limits on lending such as from capital constraints naturally incentivize tight lending standards, further amplifying shocks to credit markets. Institutional subscribers to the NBER working paper series, and residents of developing countries may download this paper without additional charge at www.nber.org.
- Published
- 2020
11. Dynamic Marketing Policies: Constructing Markov States for Reinforcement Learning
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Jonathan A. Parker, Yuting Zhu, Antoinette Schoar, and Duncan Simester
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Sequence ,Markov chain ,Exploit ,Computer science ,Reinforcement learning ,Markov property ,Markov decision process ,Marketing ,Transaction data ,Database transaction - Abstract
Many firms want to target their customers with a sequence of marketing actions, rather than just a single action. We interpret sequential targeting problems as a Markov Decision Process (MDP), which can be solved using a range of Reinforcement Learning (RL) algorithms. MDPs require the construction of Markov state spaces. These state spaces summarize the current information about each customer in each time period, so that movements over time between Markov states describe customers’ dynamic paths. The Markov property requires that the states are “memoryless,” so that future outcomes depend only upon the current state, not upon earlier states. We propose a method for constructing Markov states from historical transaction data by adapting a method that has been proposed in the computer science literature. Rather than designing states in transaction space, we construct predictions over how customers will respond to a firm’s marketing actions. We then design states using these predictions, grouping customers together if their predicted behavior is similar. To make this approach computationally tractable, we adapt the method to exploit a common feature of transaction data (sparsity). As a result, a problem that faces computational challenges in many settings, becomes more feasible in a marketing setting. The method is straightforward to implement, and the resulting states can be used in standard RL algorithms. We evaluate the method using a novel validation approach. The findings confirm that the constructed states satisfy the Markov property, and are robust to the introduction of non-Markov distortions in the data.
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- 2020
12. Retail Financial Innovation and Stock Market Dynamics: The Case of Target Date Funds
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Jonathan A. Parker, Antoinette Schoar, and Yang Sun
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- 2020
13. A Dynamic Theory of Lending Standards
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Michael Jay Fishman, Jonathan A. Parker, and Ludwig Straub
- Published
- 2020
14. Why Don’t Households Smooth Consumption? Evidence from a $25 Million Experiment
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Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
Consumption (economics) ,050208 finance ,Stimulus (economics) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Procrastination ,Monetary economics ,Payment ,Market liquidity ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Liberian dollar ,050207 economics ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,Sophistication ,health care economics and organizations ,media_common - Abstract
This paper evaluates theoretical explanations for the propensity of households to increase spending in response to the arrival of predictable, lump-sum payments, using households in the Nielsen Consumer Panel who received $25 million in randomly distributed stimulus payments. The pattern of spending is inconsistent with models in which identical households cycle rapidly through high and low- response states as they manage liquidity, but is instead highly predictable by income years before the payment. Spending responses are unrelated to expectation errors, almost unrelated to crude measures of procrastination and self-control, significantly related to sophistication and planning, and highly related to impatience. (JEL D12, D14, D91, E21, H23)
- Published
- 2017
15. Belief Disagreement and Portfolio Choice
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Jonathan A. Parker, Maarten Meeuwis, Antoinette Schoar, and Duncan Simester
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Politics ,Ex-ante ,Financial economics ,National election ,Equity (finance) ,Economics ,Portfolio ,Zip code - Abstract
Using a proprietary dataset of the portfolio holdings of millions of US households, we document how agents who believe in different models of the world update their beliefs heterogeneously in response to a public signal. We identify households ex ante that hold different models of the world using political party affiliation (probabilistically inferred from zip code), and our public signal is the unexpected outcome of the US national election of 2016. Relative to Democrats, Republican investors actively increase the equity share and market beta of their portfolios following the election. The rebalancing is due to a small share of investors making large adjustments. We conclude that this behavior is driven by belief heterogeneity because of extensive controls for differential hedging needs or preferences, including detailed controls for age, wealth, income, state, and even county-employer fixed effects.
- Published
- 2018
16. Valuation, Adverse Selection, and Market Collapses
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Michael J. Fishman, Jonathan A. Parker, and Parker, Jonathan A.
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TheoryofComputation_MISCELLANEOUS ,Economics and Econometrics ,Pre-money valuation ,Adverse selection ,TheoryofComputation_GENERAL ,jel:E44 ,Subsidy ,jel:G01 ,Microeconomics ,jel:G28 ,jel:G2 ,Accounting ,Market price ,Economics ,Finance ,Income approach ,Valuation (finance) - Abstract
We study a market for funding real investment where valuation—meaning investors devoting resources to acquiring information about future payoffs—creates an adverse selection problem. Unlike previous models, more valuation is associated with lower market prices and so greater returns to valuation. This strategic complementarity in the capacity to do valuation generates multiple equilibria. With multiple equilibria, the equilibrium without valuation is most efficient despite funding some unprofitable investments. Switches to valuation equilibria, valuation runs, look like credit crunches. A large investor can ensure the efficient equilibrium only if it can precommit to a price and potentially, only if subsidized.
- Published
- 2015
17. Editors' Introduction
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Jonathan A. Parker and Michael Woodford
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics - Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The Economic Stimulus Payments of 2008 and the aggregate demand for consumption
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Jonathan A. Parker, Christian Broda, Sloan School of Management, and Parker, Jonathan A.
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jel:D91 ,Tax policy ,Consumption (economics) ,Economics and Econometrics ,Stimulus (economics) ,jel:E62 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Consumption smoothing ,jel:E21 ,jel:D12 ,Payment ,Quarter (United States coin) ,Economics ,Disbursement ,Demographic economics ,Finance ,Aggregate demand ,media_common - Abstract
Households in the Nielsen Consumer Panel were surveyed about their 2008 Economic Stimulus Payment. In estimates identified by the randomized timing of disbursement, the average household׳s spending rose by 10 percent the week it received a Payment and remained high cumulating to 1.5–3.8 percent of spending over three months. These estimates imply partial-equilibrium increases in aggregate demand of 1.3 percent of consumption in the second quarter of 2008 and 0.6 percent in the third. Spending is concentrated among households with low wealth or low past income; a household׳s spending did not increase significantly when it learned about its Payment., Sloan School of Management, Northwestern University (Evanston, Ill.). Kellogg School of Management, University of Chicago. Initiative for Global Markets, Northwestern University (Evanston, Ill.). Kellogg School of Management. Zell Center for Risk Research, Harvard University. Laboratory for Applied Economics and Policy
- Published
- 2014
19. Essays on empirical asset pricing
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Leonid Kogan and Jonathan A. Parker., Sloan School of Management., Chen, Yixin, Ph. D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Leonid Kogan and Jonathan A. Parker., Sloan School of Management., and Chen, Yixin, Ph. D. Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Abstract
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, 2018., Cataloged from PDF version of thesis., Includes bibliographical references., This dissertation consists of three chapters. Chapter 1 shows that, for active mutual funds, historical in-sample alpha is a poor predictor of out-of-sample alpha. However, by focusing on a subset of skilled managers who are able to generate positive alpha via profitable bets on firm specific risks (stock-picking), I show that a new first-order stochastic dominance (FSD) condition can be employed as an additional search criterion to identify such skilled stock-pickers. I implement an FSD filter to select funds by bootstrapping the return distribution in a given period associated with a random stock-picking strategy that has a given factor exposure and degree of diversification. Simulations show that the identification of funds as skilled by the FSD filter performs well in finite samples, in the face of heteroscedasticity and benchmark mis-specification. With the new FSD filter, I identify a group of active funds that are able to outperform the Carhart benchmark by 2.04% (t=2.78) per year before fees (0.78% (t=1.07) per year after fees) out of sample. Moreover, in this sample of funds, in-sample alpha is significantly predictive of out-of-sample alpha: the top quintile of stock-picking mutual funds deliver an out-of-sample alpha of 3.55% (t=3.24) per year before fees (2.24% (t=2.05) per year after fees). These outperforming funds tend to be more aggressive stock-pickers (hold more concentrated portfolios), charge higher fees, and attract more fund flows. By exploring mutual fund managers' Herding tendency and Trading Intensity, Chapter 2 develops a systematic approach to identify mutual fund managers with the Warren Buffett style, i.e. managers who are fundamental, long-term, value investors. Using data during 1995-2015, I further show that the group of such managers outperformed the Carhart four-factor benchmark by 3.06% (t = 3.58) per year before fees (1.94% (t = 2.35) per year after fees). Moreover, these managers have both statistically and economically high expo, by Yixin Chen., 1. Individual Stock-picking Skills in Active Mutual Funds -- 2. Mutual Fund Managers from the Buffett School -- 3. A Global Risk Factor Is Needed to Price Global Assets., Ph. D.
- Published
- 2018
20. Essays on inequality, interest rates and macroeconomic policies
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Iván Werning and Jonathan A. Parker., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Economics., Straub, Ludwig (Ludwig Wilhelm), Iván Werning and Jonathan A. Parker., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Economics., and Straub, Ludwig (Ludwig Wilhelm)
- Abstract
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Economics, 2018., Cataloged from PDF version of thesis., Includes bibliographical references., This thesis consists of three chapters on inequality, interest rates and macroeconomic policies. The first chapter explores the macroeconomic consequences of the recent rise in permanent income inequality. First, I show that in many common macroeconomic models consumption is a linear function of permanent (labor) income. This implies that macroeconomic aggregates are neutral with respect to shifts in the distribution of permanent income. Motivated by this neutrality result, I develop novel approaches to test for linearity in U.S. household panel data. The estimates suggest an elasticity of 0.7, soundly rejecting linearity. I quantify the effects of this deviation from neutrality using a novel non-homothetic precautionary-savings model. In the model, the rise in U.S. permanent labor income inequality since the 1970s caused: (a) a decline in real interest rates of around 1%; (b) an increase in the wealth-to-GDP ratio of around 30%; (c) wealth inequality to rise almost as rapidly as it did in the data. The second chapter, joint with Sebastián Fanelli, develops a theory of foreign exchange interventions in a small open economy with limited capital mobility between home and foreign bond markets. Due to limited capital mobility, the central bank can implement nonzero bond spreads by managing its portfolio. Crucially, spreads are inherently costly as they allow foreign intermediaries to make carry-trade profits. Optimal interventions balance these costs with terms of trade benefits. We show that they lean against the wind of global capital flows to avoid excessive currency appreciation. Due to the convexity of the costs, interventions should be small and spread out, relying on credible promises (forward guidance) of future interventions. By contrast, excessive smoothing of the exchange rate path may create large spreads, inviting costly speculation. Finally, in a multi-country extension of our model, we find that the decentralized equilibrium features too much reserve accu, by Ludwig Straub., Ph. D.
- Published
- 2018
21. Optimal Time-Inconsistent Beliefs: Misplanning, Procrastination, and Commitment
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Markus K. Brunnermeier, Filippos Papakonstantinou, and Jonathan A. Parker
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preference for commitment ,Strategy and Management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,optimal beliefs ,050109 social psychology ,Computer Science::Artificial Intelligence ,Management Science and Operations Research ,time-inconsistent preferences ,Structural theory ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,planning fallacy ,Nonlinear Sciences::Adaptation and Self-Organizing Systems ,Time-inconsistent preferences ,Optimism ,0502 economics and business ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050207 economics ,media_common ,Actuarial science ,Planning fallacy ,05 social sciences ,Procrastination ,Time optimal ,optimism ,chemistry ,Time consistency ,time-inconsistent beliefs ,procrastination ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Abstract
We develop a structural theory of beliefs and behavior that relaxes the assumption of time consistency in beliefs. Our theory is based on the trade-off between optimism, which raises anticipatory utility, and objectivity, which promotes efficient actions. We present it in the context of allocating work on a project over time, develop testable implications to contrast it with models assuming time-inconsistent preferences, and compare its predictions to existing evidence on behavior and beliefs. Our predictions are that (i) optimal beliefs are optimistic and time inconsistent; (ii) people optimally exhibit the planning fallacy; (iii) incentives for rapid task completion make beliefs more optimistic and worsen work smoothing, whereas incentives for accurate duration prediction make beliefs less optimistic and improve work smoothing; (iv) without a commitment device, beliefs become less optimistic over time; and (v) in the presence of a commitment device, beliefs may become more optimistic over time, and people optimally exhibit preference for commitment. This paper was accepted by Neng Wang, finance.
- Published
- 2017
22. Editors’ Introduction
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Jonathan A. Parker and Michael Woodford
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics - Published
- 2014
23. Consumer Spending and the Economic Stimulus Payments of 2008
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Jonathan A. Parker, Robert McClelland, Nicholas S. Souleles, and David Johnson
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jel:D91 ,Receipt ,Economics and Econometrics ,Stimulus (economics) ,Public economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,jel:E62 ,Consumer spending ,jel:E65 ,jel:E21 ,jel:D12 ,Payment ,jel:H31 ,Transfer payments multiplier ,jel:D14 ,jel:H24 ,Economics ,Consumer Expenditure Survey ,health care economics and organizations ,media_common - Abstract
We measure the response of household spending to the economic stimulus payments (ESPs) disbursed in mid-2008, using special questions added to the Consumer Expenditure Survey and variation arising from the randomized timing of when the payments were disbursed. We find that, on average, households spent about 12-30% (depending on the specification) of their stimulus payments on nondurable expenditures during the three-month period in which the payments were received. Further, there was also a substantial and significant increase in spending on durable goods, in particular vehicles, bringing the average total spending response to about 50-90% of the payments. Relative to research on the 2001 tax rebates, these spending responses are estimated with greater precision using the randomized timing variation. The estimated responses are substantial and significant for older, lower-income, and home-owning households. We find little evidence that the propensity to spend varies with the method of disbursement (paper check versus electronic transfer).
- Published
- 2013
24. Dissolution of Metals from Biosolid-Treated Soils by Organic Acid Mixtures
- Author
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Stephanie V. Lara, Won-Pyo Park, Chau M. Nguyen, Andrew C. Chang, Tracy H. Ward, Bon-Jun Koo, Jonathan R. Parker, and T. E. Ferko
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Metal dissolution ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,lcsh:GE1-350 ,Article Subject ,Chemistry ,Metallurgy ,Kinetics ,Soil Science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,lcsh:S1-972 ,Solubilization ,Environmental chemistry ,Soil water ,040103 agronomy & agriculture ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Composition (visual arts) ,Solubility ,lcsh:Agriculture (General) ,Dissolution ,lcsh:Environmental sciences ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Organic acid - Abstract
Results for the solubilization of metals from biosolid- (BSL-) treated soils by simulated organic acid-based synthetic root exudates (OA mixtures) of differing composition and concentrations are presented. This study used two BSL-treated Romona soils and a BSL-free Romona soil control that were collected from experimental plots of a long-term BSL land application experiment. Results indicate that the solubility of metals in a BSL-treated soil with 0.01 and 0.1 M OA mixtures was significantly higher than that of 0.001 M concentrations. Differences in composition of OAs caused by BSL treatment and the length of growing periods did not affect the solubility of metals. There were no significant differences in organic composition and metals extracted for plants grown at 2, 4, 8, 12, and 16 weeks. The amount of metals extracted tended to decrease with the increase of the pH. Results of metal dissolution kinetics indicate two-stage metal dissolution. A rapid dissolution of metals occurred in the first 15 minutes. For Cd, Cu, Ni, and Zn, approximately 60–70% of the metals were released in the first 15 minutes while the initial releases for Cr and Pb were approximately 30% of the total. It was then followed by a slow but steady release of additional metals over 48 hours.
- Published
- 2016
25. On Measuring the Effects of Fiscal Policy in Recessions
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Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
Macroeconomics ,Economics and Econometrics ,Counterfactual conditional ,General equilibrium theory ,jel:E62 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,jel:E32 ,jel:H50 ,Recession ,jel:E12 ,jel:E13 ,Fiscal policy ,jel:E17 ,Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium ,Economics ,Multiplier (economics) ,Aggregate data ,jel:E5 ,Weighted arithmetic mean ,media_common - Abstract
We do not have a good measure of the effects of fiscal policy in a recession because the methods that we use to estimate the effects of fiscal policy—both those using the observed outcomes following different policies in aggregate data and those studying counterfactuals in fitted model economies—almost entirely ignore the state of the economy and estimate “the” government multiplier, which is presumably a weighted average of the one we care about—the multiplier in a recession—and one we care less about—the multiplier in an expansion. Notable exceptions to this general claim suggest this difference is potentially large. Our lack of knowledge stems significantly from the focus on linear dynamics: vector autoregressions and linearized (or close-to-linear) dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) models. Our lack of knowledge also reflects a lack of data: deep recessions are few and nonlinearities hard to measure. The lack of statistical power in the estimation of nonlinear models using aggregate data can be addressed by exploiting estimates of partial-equilibrium responses in disaggregated data. Microeconomic estimates of the partial-equilibrium causal effects of a policy can discipline the causal channels inherent in any DSGE model of the general equilibrium effects of policy. Microeconomic studies can also provide measures of the dependence of the effects of a policy on the states of different agents, which is a key component of the dependence of the general-equilibrium effects of fiscal policy on the state of the economy. (JEL E12, E13, E32, E62, H50)
- Published
- 2011
26. The Increase in Income Cyclicality of High-Income Households and Its Relation to the Rise in Top Income Shares
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Jonathan A. Parker and Annette Vissing-Jorgensen
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Economics and Econometrics ,jel:H24 ,jel:M52 ,jel:O57 ,jel:G3 ,jel:O33 ,jel:O32 ,jel:E32 ,income, cyclicality, households ,jel:D31 ,jel:J31 ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,jel:E24 - Abstract
We document a large increase in the cyclicality of the incomes of high-income households, coinciding with the rise in their share of aggregate income. In the U.S., since top income shares began to rise rapidly in the early 1980s, incomes of those in the top 1 percent of the income distribution have averaged 14 times average income and been 2.4 times more cyclical. Before the early 1980s, incomes of the top 1 percent were slightly less cyclical than average. The increase in income cyclicality at the top is to a large extent due to increases in the share and the cyclicality of their earned income. The high cyclicality among top incomes is found for households without stock options; following the same households over time; for post-tax, post-transfer income; and for consumption. We study cyclicality throughout the income distribution and reconcile with earlier work. Furthermore, greater top income share is associated with greater top income cyclicality across recent decades, across subgroups of top income households, and, in changes, across countries. This suggests a common cause. We show theoretically that increases in the production scale of the most talented can raise both top incomes and their cyclicality.
- Published
- 2010
27. Effect of a Titration Polysomnogram on Treatment Success with a Mandibular Repositioning Appliance
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Fernanda R. Almeida, Kathleen A. Ferguson, Alan A. Lowe, James S. Hodges, and Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Oral appliance ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Polysomnogram ,Apnea ,Sleep apnea ,Objective Improvement ,Polysomnography ,medicine.disease ,nervous system diseases ,Surgery ,Obstructive sleep apnea ,Neurology ,Anesthesia ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Continuous positive airway pressure ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Mandibular repositioning appliance (MRA) therapy for snoring and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is an accepted treatment option for patients with mild to moderate disease. A recent comprehensive review of oral appliance therapy reported that patients with mild to severe OSA had a 52% chance of having an apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) < 10/h with a mandibular repositioning appliance.1 This rate of efficacy was not measurably better than that found in an earlier comprehensive literature review,2 despite improvements in the quality of the research studies and the introduction of titratable MRAs. In general, the adjustable MRA is initially set at 50% to 75% of maximum mandibular protrusion. The appliance is further advanced until symptoms improve or the maximum tolerated protrusion is reached. Overnight monitoring is usually done to determine the amount of objective improvement in apnea severity with MRA treatment. Despite the widespread use of titratable appliances, efficacy rates are not significantly better than those of fixed position appliances.1,2 Previous research has evaluated whether overnight titration of mandibular advancement during polysomnography could be used to initiate MRA therapy in a fashion similar to the titration of nasal continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). The first study of overnight titration used an appliance that was removed from the patient's mouth and adjusted manually.3 Other titration studies have used a temporary appliance that can be adjusted either by awakening the patient4 or without awakening the patient.5,6 The temporary appliance was advanced either manually after removal of the temporary appliance,4 by a hydraulic system,5 or by remote control of a motorized system.6 However, results of these studies were mixed in terms of predicting the amount of advancement needed for successful MRA therapy. Furthermore, overnight titration of an MRA remains an experimental approach, and the technology for remote-controlled advancement is not widely available. Another method for appliance titration consists of clinical titration of the device to symptom resolution or to maximum tolerated advancement, with the addition of overnight home monitoring to determine objective improvement. The addition of home monitoring may provide data of an incomplete response that could allow further advancement to take place prior to outcome polysomnography (PSG). In a study of 40 patients using this approach, 64% of subjects had a complete response (AHI < 10/h with resolution of symptoms).7 Although this is a better success rate than in most studies of MRA therapy, many patients in this study were insufficiently treated despite an intensive clinical titration protocol. We evaluated a simple clinical protocol consisting of incremental advancement of an MRA by the patient to the point of good symptom control, followed by a titration PSG with the opportunity to further advance the appliance if needed. This titration PSG allowed for further advancement of the MRA during the night if the AHI remained high. The goal of the study was to determine if patients with an elevated AHI, despite the use of a clinically optimized MRA, could achieve better results with additional titration during the outcome PSG.
- Published
- 2009
28. Why Don't Households Smooth Consumption? Evidence from a 25 Million Dollar Experiment
- Author
-
Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
jel:E21 ,jel:D14 - Abstract
This paper evaluates theoretical explanations for the propensity of households to increase spending in response to the arrival of predictable, lump-sum payments, using households in the Nielsen Consumer Panel who received 25 million in randomly-distributed stimulus payments. The pattern of spending is inconsistent with models in which identical households cycle rapidly through high and low response states as they manage liquidity, but is instead highly predictable by income years before the payment. Spending responses are unrelated to expectation errors, almost unrelated to crude measures of procrastination and self-control, significantly related to sophistication and planning, and highly related to impatience.
- Published
- 2015
29. Household Expenditure and the Income Tax Rebates of 2001
- Author
-
David Johnson, Nicholas S. Souleles, and Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
Low income ,Receipt ,Consumption (economics) ,Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,jel:E62 ,05 social sciences ,1. No poverty ,jel:E21 ,jel:H31 ,Market liquidity ,Permanent income hypothesis ,Income tax ,8. Economic growth ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Demographic economics ,Consumer Expenditure Survey ,050207 economics - Abstract
Under the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001, most U.S. taxpayers received a tax rebate between July and September, 2001. The week in which the rebate was mailed was based on the second-to-last digit of the taxpayer's Social Security number, a digit that is effectively randomly assigned. Using special questions about the rebates added to the Consumer Expenditure Survey, we exploit this historically unique experiment to measure the change in consumption expenditures caused by receipt of the rebate and to test the Permanent Income Hypothesis and related models. We find that households spent about 20-40 percent of their rebates on non-durable goods during the three-month period in which their rebates were received, and roughly another third of their rebates during the subsequent three-month period. The implied effects on aggregate consumption demand are significant. The estimated responses are largest for households with relatively low liquid wealth and low income, consistent with liquidity constraints.
- Published
- 2006
30. Precautionary Saving and Consumption Fluctuations
- Author
-
Jonathan A. Parker and Bruce Preston
- Subjects
Consumption (economics) ,Economics and Econometrics ,05 social sciences ,Substitution (logic) ,Incomplete markets ,0502 economics and business ,8. Economic growth ,Econometrics ,Economics ,Decomposition (computer science) ,Growth rate ,050207 economics ,Volatility (finance) ,Real interest rate ,050205 econometrics - Abstract
This paper uses the consumption Euler equation to derive a decomposition of consumption growth into four sources. These four sources are new information, and three sources of predictable consumption growth: intertemporal substitution, changes in the preferences for consumption, and incomplete markets for consumption insurance. Using household-level data, we implement this decomposition for the average growth rate of consumption expenditures on nondurable goods in the United States from 1982 to 1997. The economic importance of precautionary saving rivals that of the real interest rate, but the relative importance of each source of movement in the volatility of consumption is not precisely measured.
- Published
- 2005
31. [Federal Government Debt and Interest Rates]: Comment
- Author
-
Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Economic policy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Debt-to-GDP ratio ,Economics ,Government debt ,Monetary economics ,Debt levels and flows ,Interest rate ,media_common - Published
- 2004
32. Consumption Risk and Expected Stock Returns
- Author
-
Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,Financial economics ,Market portfolio ,Consumption-based capital asset pricing model ,Equity premium puzzle ,Risk premium ,05 social sciences ,jel:G12 ,jel:G11 ,0502 economics and business ,8. Economic growth ,Econometrics ,Economics ,Capital asset pricing model ,050207 economics ,Predictability ,Market value ,health care economics and organizations ,Stock (geology) - Abstract
U.S. stock returns are large, predictable over time, and predictable across stocks. The average return on a diversified market portfolio has averaged 8 percent per year more than the return on a short-term treasury bill. The predictability of time variation in returns is modest at high frequencies (about 10 percent of the variation in returns one quarter ahead is predictable) and quite large over longer periods (just under half of the variation in returns over five-year periods is predictable). Finally, portfolios based on the intersection of quintiles of stocks ranked by market value and by the ratio of book value to market value have differences in average annual returns across stocks of several percent per year. The natural explanation for these variations in returns is risk. But variations in consumption risk have done a poor job of explaining these differences in expected returns (see e.g., Sanford J. Grossman and Robert J. Shiller, 1981; Shiller, 1982; Lars Peter Hansen and Kenneth J. Singleton, 1983; N. Gregory Mankiw and Mat
- Published
- 2003
33. Consumption Over the Life Cycle
- Author
-
Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas and Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
jel:D91 ,Consumption (economics) ,Economics and Econometrics ,Stochastic modelling ,Risk aversion ,jel:C61 ,Econometrics ,Economics ,Survey sampling ,Consumer Expenditure Survey ,Method of simulated moments ,Consumer behaviour ,Market liquidity - Abstract
This paper employs a synthetic cohort technique and Consumer Expenditure Survey data to construct average age-profiles of consumption and income over the working lives of typical households across different education and occupation groups. Using these profiles, we estimate a structural model of optimal life-cycle consumption expenditures in the presence of realistic labor income uncertainty. The model fits the profiles quite well. In addition to providing tight estimates of the discount rate and risk aversion, we find that consumer behavior changes strikingly over the life-cycle. Young consumers behave as buffer-stock agents. Around age 40, the typical household starts accumulating liquid assets for retirement, and its behavior mimics more closely that of a certainty equivalent consumer. This change in behavior is mostly driven by the life-cycle profile of expected income. Our methodology provides a natural decomposition of saving into its precautionary and retirement components.
- Published
- 2002
34. Comments and Discussion
- Author
-
Jonathan A. Parker and Janet L. (Janet Louise) Yellen
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,General Business, Management and Accounting - Published
- 2002
35. The Economic Stimulus Payments of 2008 and the Aggregate Demand for Consumption
- Author
-
Christian Broda and Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
Tax policy ,Labour economics ,Stimulus (economics) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Consumer spending ,Disbursement ,Economics ,Demographic economics ,Payment ,Aggregate demand ,media_common - Abstract
Households in the Nielsen Consumer Panel were surveyed about their 2008 Economic Stimulus Payment. In estimates identified by the randomized timing of disbursement, the average household’s spending rose by ten percent the week it received a Payment and remained high cumulating to 1.5–3.8 percent of spending over three months. These estimates imply partial-equilibrium increases in aggregate demand of 1.3 percent of consumption in the second quarter of 2008 and 0.6 percent in the third. Spending is concentrated among households with low wealth or low past income; a household’s spending did not increase significantly when it learned about its Payment.
- Published
- 2014
36. The Consumption Risk of the Stock Market
- Author
-
Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Equity risk ,050208 finance ,Financial economics ,Equity premium puzzle ,Risk premium ,05 social sciences ,1. No poverty ,Financial risk management ,macroeconomics, Consumption Risk, Stock Market ,Security market line ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Market neutral ,0502 economics and business ,8. Economic growth ,Economics ,Capital asset pricing model ,Stock market ,050207 economics - Abstract
OVER THE PAST century in the United States, the average annual return on the stock market has exceeded that on short-term government bonds by 6 percentage points. The natural economic explanation for the premium on equity is the greater risks associated with investing in the stock market. However, the large premium that we observe cannot be explained by the canonical, consumption-based asset pricing model. Risk is best measured as the extent to which a return alters marginal utility. Since marginal utility is closely related to consumption, and consumption moves little with returns, the measured risk of the stock market is small. (1) One common informal interpretation of this equity premium puzzle is that stocks are a good deal. In this view, the model is taken as a reasonably accurate description of optimal behavior and a poor description of actual behavior. This normative view of the model and the data implies that households should increase their holdings of equity and even borrow to invest in the stock market. (2) Such thinking has also entered important areas of public policy, most notably in proposals to allow funds from the Social Security system--whether the current $1 trillion surplus in the trust fund or the entire $10 trillion in implicit liabilities--to be invested in the stock market rather than entirely in government bonds as is currently done. The positive view of the equity premium puzzle is that we simply do not understand asset prices. Since the puzzle was discovered, economists' efforts to find a model that rationalizes the premium have yielded little success. That is, there is as yet no model of a household investment problem with reasonable levels of risk aversion that explains the variation in returns over time, and the difference in returns between stocks and bonds in particular. This leaves economists largely unable to model investment behavior and largely unable to provide policymakers with guidance for the diversification of the Social Security system. This paper proposes an understanding of the risk-return trade-off between stocks and bonds that departs from the canonical model in two ways. First, I ignore many issues in asset pricing and focus solely on the ultimate risk to consumption of a given portfolio choice. That is, rather than measure the risk to consumption as the contemporaneous response of consumption to returns on the stock market, this paper measures the risk as the medium-term impact of stock market returns on consumption. (3) Second, in addition to studying the medium-term risk of equity as measured by aggregate consumption data, I follow Gregory Mankiw and Stephen Zeldes and ask whether the risk of equity justifies its return for the subset of households that hold equity. (4) The main finding of the paper is that the medium-term risk of equity is much greater than the contemporaneous risk, both for the representative household and for the representative stock. holder. For households that hold equity, the medium-term risk is largely sufficient to justify the high relative return of equity. Measuring the risk of equity as the medium-term impact of a return on consumption has several appealing features. First, this approach maintains the assumption that the primary determinant of utility is the level of consumption. This assumption is intuitive and has proved useful and successful in many other branches of economics. Second, this approach is consistent with the theory of portfolio choice in that the medium-term risk and the contemporaneous risk should be approximately the same according to the canonical model. Most important, the medium-term risk is a better measure of the true risk of the stock market under a wide class of extant models used in the study of household consumption and saving. If consumption responds with a lag to changes in wealth, then the contemporaneous covariance of consumption and wealth understates the risk of equity, and the medium-term risk provides the correct measure. …
- Published
- 2001
37. The Reaction of Household Consumption to Predictable Changes in Social Security Taxes
- Author
-
Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
Consumption (economics) ,Economics and Econometrics ,Labour economics ,Rational expectations ,jel:D12 ,Monetary economics ,Autonomous consumption ,jel:H55 ,jel:H31 ,Fiscal policy ,Social security ,Business cycle ,Economics ,Consumer Expenditure Survey - Abstract
The key implication of rational expectations and the basic life-cycle/permanent-income hypothesis: that predictable changes in income have no effect on the growth rate of consumption expenditures, is examined. This implication is important for understanding the effectiveness and optimal timing of fiscal policy, the causes and propagation of business cycles, and the effects of income fluctuations on the growth rate of the economy. Using household-level consumption data from the Consumer Expenditure Survey, whether expenditures on nondurable goods increase contemporaneously with predictable changes in Social Security tax withholding is tested. It is found that households do change their consumption expenditures in response to the predictable fluctuations in income induced by the Social Security tax system.
- Published
- 1999
38. APRIL 15 SYNDROME
- Author
-
Jonathan A. Parker, Joel Slemrod, Rebecca A. London, and Charles W. Christian
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Actuarial science ,Value-added tax ,Ad valorem tax ,Public economics ,Tax credit ,Direct tax ,State income tax ,Economics ,Tax reform ,Tax avoidance ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Indirect tax - Abstract
I. INTRODUCTION The popular characterization of completing and mailing individual tax forms is that people wait until the last minute to fill out their returns, and then rush to mail them at their nearest post office, which has extended its hours until midnight. This phenomenon, which we call "April 15 syndrome," has large private costs. We estimate that for tax year 1988 the 73.2 million taxpayers claiming refunds gave up nearly one billion dollars in interest, or an average of about $13.50 per return, due to filing the forms later than the earliest possible time.(1) More incomprehensible from an economic standpoint, but of less quantitative significance, are the impatient tax filers - 10.5 million taxpayers who owed the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) money and passed up $46 million in interest by mailing in their taxes before the filing deadline. In addition to these direct costs, tax returns done in haste at the last minute may be more prone to error; to the extent they are not caught by the IRS, this adds to the capriciousness of the tax burden. Correcting the errors due to rushed completing of forms also adds to the administrative costs of the IRS. Many cities and towns keep their post offices open late for no reason other than to accommodate the severe procrastinator. Finally, return processing is slowed by the avalanche of returns filed in mid-April. We present some exploratory analyses of April 15 syndrome using 1988 tax return data. After describing in section II the legal framework for tax filing, in section III we discuss the data and present the basic facts with which any model of filing behavior has to contend. There is a wide distribution of filing times, and a substantial fraction of households which, despite being owed refunds, file late, or which, despite owing taxes, file early. In section IV, we consider some basic models of the decision as to when to file one's taxes. We note that the simplest model fails to rationalize the most obvious characteristic of the data the substantial heterogeneity of filing times. In the baseline rational model individuals simply maximize their income less effort, which involves either complete procrastination or prompt filing. Adding imperfect information does not seem to eliminate the result. We are led to a model in which individuals have a stochastic opportunity cost of doing their taxes. This model generates a wide distribution of filing times for returns which will get refunds and rationalizes procrastination. However, our framework fails to generate early filing of returns with taxes due, and we consider the issue again after our analysis of the data. In section V, we take the predictions of our model to the data. We examine the various characteristics of refund and remittance returns and perform some reduced-form regressions of the determinants of return filing time. Most supportive of our interpretation of late filing for refunds, there is much less procrastination for returns which are filled out by a paid preparer, than for returns which are filed by the taxpayer. Further, we find that the complexity of forms delays filing, both for returns with tax due and for those with refunds. People with a higher marginal valuation of time, proxied by higher incomes, are more likely to file later, and the larger the refund value, the sooner the return is expected to be filed. Returns which are completed by professional tax preparers do not exhibit these last two characteristics. Finally, cross-year analysis demonstrates that filing late is habitual, suggesting that households have persistently different values of time or propensities to procrastinate. We conclude by speculating on the objectives and constraints which might generate early filing by individuals with taxes due and by considering the implications of our findings. We believe that our investigation of the timing of tax return filing informs us about other examples of apparently non-optimal timing of economic behavior. …
- Published
- 1997
39. Disentangling Financial Constraints, Precautionary Savings, and Myopia: Household Behavior Surrounding Federal Tax Returns
- Author
-
Itzhak Ben-David, Hoonsuk Park, Brian Baugh, and Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
Receipt ,Consumption (economics) ,Precautionary savings ,Mental accounting ,Econometrics ,Consumption smoothing ,Economics ,Household finance - Abstract
We explore household consumption surrounding federal tax returns filings and refunds receipt to test various theories of consumption. Because uncertainty regarding the refund is resolved at filing, precautionary savings theory predicts an increase in consumption at this date. Contrary to this prediction, we find that households generally do not increase consumption at filing. Following the receipt of the refunds, consumption of both durables and nondurables increases dramatically and then decays quickly. Our results show that households, on average, are financially constrained, exhibit myopic behavior, and do not respond to precautionary savings motives.
- Published
- 2013
40. LEADS on Macroeconomic Risks to and from the Household Sector
- Author
-
Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
Actuarial science ,Creditor ,business.industry ,Economics ,Public policy ,Distribution (economics) ,Monetary economics ,business - Abstract
This chapter describes a system, called the LEADS system, for providing market participants, regulators, and households with information on the reallocation of resources within, from, and to the household sector in response to macroeconomic events. The household sector is both a propagator of shocks to the economy, as wealth is redistributed across households with differing propensities to consume, and an originator of risky claims held in systemically important places, as losses are shifted from households to creditors such as financial institutions. Information about these exposures, like information generally, is conveyed by prices and so is under-produced by markets. The LEADS system - collection, analysis, and distribution of information on household exposures to macroeconomic risk factors - can potentially lead to better macroeconomic performance through better informed public policy and private decision- making
- Published
- 2012
41. Consumer Spending and the Economic Stimulus Payments of 2008
- Author
-
Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
health care economics and organizations - Abstract
We measure the response of household spending to the economic stimulus payments (ESPs) disbursed in mid-2008, using special questions added to the Consumer Expenditure Survey and variation arising from the randomized timing of when the payments were disbursed. We find that, on average, households spent about 12-30% (depending on the specification) of their stimulus payments on non-durable expenditures during the three-month period in which the payments were received. Further, there was also a substantial and significant increase in spending on durable goods, in particular vehicles, bringing the average total spending response to about 50-90% of the payments. Relative to research on the 2001 tax rebates, these spending responses are estimated with greater precision using the randomized timing variation. The estimated responses are substantial and significant for older, lower-income, and home-owning households. We further extend the literature in two ways. First, we find little evidence that the propensity to spend varies with the method of disbursement (paper check versus electronic transfer). Second, we evaluate a complementary methodology for quantifying the impact of tax cuts, which asks consumers to self-report whether they spent their tax cuts. The response of spending to the ESPs is indeed largest for self-reported spenders. However, self-reported savers also spent a significant fraction of the payments.
- Published
- 2011
42. Lecturing and Loving It: Applying the Information-Processing Model
- Author
-
Jonathan K. Parker
- Subjects
Information processing theory ,Computer science ,Teaching method ,Pedagogy ,Mathematics education ,Curriculum development ,Clearing ,Cognition ,Communication skills - Abstract
(1993). Lecturing and Loving It: Applying the Information-Processing Model. The Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas: Vol. 67, No. 1, pp. 8-11.
- Published
- 1993
43. Reversing the Paradox: Evidence-Based Medicine and Osteopathic Medicine
- Author
-
Jonathan D. Parker
- Subjects
Complementary and Manual Therapy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,business.industry ,Alternative medicine ,MEDLINE ,Evidence-based medicine ,Osteopathic medicine in the United States ,Complementary and alternative medicine ,Internal medicine ,Family medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,business ,Osteopathic Medicine - Published
- 2014
44. Valuation and the Volatility of Financing and Investment
- Author
-
Jonathan A. Parker and Michael Fishman
- Abstract
all projects are funded. In the region of multiplicity, the move from a pooling (socially efficient) equilibrium to a valuation (socially inefficient) equilibrium involves many features of a financial crisis: prices decline (interest spreads rise); real investment declines; unsophisticated investors leave the market (flight to quality) and sophisticated investors make profits; trust declines and due diligence increases.
- Published
- 2010
45. The Integrated Financial and Real System of National Accounts for the United States: Does It Presage the Financial Crisis?
- Author
-
Michael G. Palumbo and Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
Finance ,Economics and Econometrics ,Gross fixed capital formation ,business.industry ,National accounts ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Financial ratio ,jel:E21 ,jel:E32 ,Financial system ,National Income and Product Accounts ,jel:G01 ,Recession ,jel:E01 ,Financial crisis ,Financial analysis ,Economics ,Intermediate consumption ,business ,media_common - Abstract
The initial implementation of the System of National Accounts (1993) for the United States by the Bureau of Economic Analysis and the Federal Reserve Board has two significant advantages for economists. First, the SNA are organized according to sectors of the economy defined by economic agents: firms, financial institutions, consumers, governments and the rest of the world. Second, the accounts integrate real and financial information, so that one can track not only production of, income from, and use of output, but also net lending, net borrowing, and net worth by sector. We exploit these two features in the SNA accounts to examine US economic history leading up to the financial crisis of 2007 and recession of 2008. First, the SNA data show recent increases in leverage in the household sector. We track the household shift to a net lending position through the capital and current accounts of the household sector and then the other SNA sectors. Second, in the financial businesses sector, the accounts largely miss the rise in exposure to the US housing market as well as the critical factors that significantly spread and amplified the housing-market related changes throughout the financial system and the real economy. Finally we present three ways in which SNA-type accounts could be improved to presage a similar future crisis.
- Published
- 2009
46. Who Bears Aggregate Fluctuations and How?
- Author
-
Jonathan A. Parker and Annette Vissing-Jorgensen
- Subjects
Consumption (economics) ,Economics and Econometrics ,Labour economics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Wage ,jel:E21 ,jel:E32 ,Percentage point ,Autonomous consumption ,jel:J31 ,Aggregate expenditure ,jel:G1 ,Economics ,Per capita ,Aggregate income ,Demographic economics ,Consumption distribution ,media_common - Abstract
The consumption of high-consumption households is more exposed to fluctuations in aggregate consumption and income than that of low-consumption households in the Consumer Expenditure (CEX) Survey. The exposure to aggregate consumption growth of households in the top 10 percent of the consumption distribution in the CEX is about five times that of households in the bottom 80 percent. Given real aggregate per capita consumption growth about 3 percentage points less than its historical mean during the past year, these figures predict that the ratio of consumption of the top 10 percent to the bottom 80 percent has fallen by about 15 percentage points (relative to trend). Using income data from Piketty and Saez (2003), we show that the income (especially the wage income) of rich households is more exposed to aggregate fluctuations, so their higher income exposure is a likely contributor to their higher consumption exposure. Finally, we find a striking change in the exposure of the incomes of high-income households: prior to the early 1980's, the incomes of high-income households were not more exposed to aggregate fluctuations. Thus, while high-income households currently bear an inordinately large share of aggregate fluctuations, this is a recent occurrence.
- Published
- 2009
47. An Economic Model of the Planning Fallacy
- Author
-
Markus K. Brunnermeier, Filippos Papakonstantinou, and Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
jel:D80 ,jel:E21 ,jel:D10 - Abstract
People tend to underestimate the work involved in completing tasks and consequently finish tasks later than expected or do an inordinate amount of work right before projects are due. We present a theory in which people underpredict and procrastinate because the ex-ante utility benefits of anticipating that a task will be easy to complete outweigh the average ex-post costs of poor planning. We show that, given a commitment device, people self-impose deadlines that are binding but require less smoothing of work than those chosen by a person with objective beliefs. We test our theory using extant experimental evidence on differences in expectations and behavior. We find that reported beliefs and behavior generally respond as our theory predicts. For example, monetary incentives for accurate prediction ameliorate the planning fallacy while incentives for rapid completion aggravate it.
- Published
- 2008
48. Optimal Beliefs, Asset Prices, and the Preference for Skewed Returns
- Author
-
Christian Gollier, Markus K. Brunnermeier, Jonathan A. Parker, Bendheim Center for Finance, Princeton University, Economie des Ressources Naturelles (LERNA), Université Toulouse 1 Capitole (UT1), Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA), Université des Sciences Sociales (Toulouse 1), Université Toulouse Capitole (UT Capitole), Université de Toulouse (UT)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives (CEA), and Université de Toulouse (UT)
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,belief biases ,heterogeneous beliefs ,optimal expectations ,skewness ,General equilibrium theory ,Ceteris paribus ,ASSET PRICING ,Diversification (finance) ,[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences ,Microeconomics ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Asset (economics) ,050207 economics ,OPTIMAL ,ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS ,EXPECTATIONS ,Consumption (economics) ,050208 finance ,Complete market ,HETEROGENEOUS BELIEFS ,05 social sciences ,Skewness risk ,jel:G12 ,jel:G11 ,PORTFOLIO CHOICE ,8. Economic growth ,jel:D1 ,Portfolio ,jel:D8 - Abstract
Human beings want to believe that good outcomes in the future are more likely, but also want to make good decisions that increase average outcomes in the future. We consider a general equilibrium model with complete markets and show that when investors hold beliefs that optimally balance these two incentives, portfolio holdings and asset prices match six observed patterns: (i) because the cost of biased beliefs are typically second-order, investors typically hold biased assessments of probabilities and so are not perfectly diversified according to objective metrics; (ii) because the costs of biased beliefs temper these biases, the utility costs of the lack of diversification are limited; (iii) because there is a complementarity between believing a state more likely and purchasing more of the asset that pays off in that state, investors over-invest in only one Arrow-Debreu security and smooth their consumption well across the remaining states; (iv) because different households can settle on different states to be optimistic about, optimal portfolios of ex ante identical investors can be heterogeneous; (v) because low-price and low-probability states are the cheapest states to buy consumption in, overoptimism about these states distorts consumption the least in the rest of the states, so that investors tend to overinvest in the most skewed securities; (vi) finally, because investors with optimal expectations have higher demand for more skewed assets, ceteris paribus, more skewed asset can have lower average returns.
- Published
- 2007
49. Taxes and Growth in a Financially Underdeveloped Country: Evidence from the Chilean Investment Boom
- Author
-
Chang-Tai Hsieh and Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
05 social sciences ,Financial market ,1. No poverty ,Monetary economics ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Boom ,Tax rate ,Capital (economics) ,8. Economic growth ,0502 economics and business ,Marginal product ,Economics ,External financing ,050207 economics ,Real interest rate ,050205 econometrics - Abstract
This paper argues that taxation of retained profits is particularly distortionary in an economy with good growth prospects and poorly developed financial markets because it primarily reduces the investment of financially constrained firms, investment that has marginal product greater than the after-tax market real interest rate. Contrarily, taxes on distributed profits or capital gains primarily reduce the investment of financially unconstrained firms. Chile experienced a banking crisis over the period from 1982 to 1986 and in 1984 reduced its tax rate on retained profits from 50 percent to 10 percent. We show that, consistent with our theory, there was a large increase in aggregate investment after the reform which was entirely funded by an increase in retained profits. Further, we show that investment grew by more in industries that depend more on external financing, according to the Rajan and Zingales (1998) measure. Finally, we present some weak evidence from comparisons of investment rates across firms for several different measures of their likelihood of being financially constrained.
- Published
- 2006
50. Taxes and Growth in a Financially Underdeveloped Country: Evidence from the Chilean Investment Boom
- Author
-
Chang-Tai. Hsieh and Jonathan A. Parker
- Subjects
jel:D92 ,050208 finance ,05 social sciences ,1. No poverty ,jel:E22 ,jel:H32 ,8. Economic growth ,0502 economics and business ,Political Science and International Relations ,jel:O54 ,jel:O16 ,050207 economics ,Business and International Management ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance - Abstract
This paper argues that taxation of retained profits is particularly distortionary in an economy with good growth prospects and poorly developed financial markets because it primarily reduces the investment of financially constrained firms, investment that has marginal product greater than the after-tax market real interest rate. Contrarily, taxes on distributed profits or capital gains primarily reduce the investment of financially unconstrained firms. Chile experienced a banking crisis over the period from 1982 to 1986 and in 1984 reduced its tax rate on retained profits from 50 percent to 10 percent. We show that, consistent with our theory, there was a large increase in aggregate investment after the reform which was entirely funded by an increase in retained profits. Further, we show that investment grew by more in industries that depend more on external financing, according to the Rajan and Zingales (1998) measure. Finally, we present some weak evidence from comparisons of investment rates across firms for several different measures of their likelihood of being financially constrained.
- Published
- 2006
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