Discussion paper

DP15361 (S)Cars and the Great Recession

US households' consumption and car purchases collapsed during the Great Recession for reasons that are still poorly understood. In this paper we use the Consumer Expenditure Survey to derive cohort and business cycle decompositions of consumption prfio les. When decomposing the car expenditure data into its extensive and intensive margins, we find that the intensive margin contracted sharply in the Great Recession, a fi nding in stark contrast to conventional wisdom and to the experience of prior recessions. We interpret the evidence through the prism of a very rich life-cycle model where individuals are subject to idiosyncratic uninsurable income shocks, aggregate income shocks, wealth shocks, and credit shocks. We show that, because of their salience and the transaction costs, cars are particularly sensitive to changes in the perception of future expected income and its variability. We find that on top of a large aggregate income shock, life-cycle income pro file shocks and wealth shocks are important determinants of consumption choices during the Great Recession.

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Citation

Ravn, M, O Attanasio, K Larkin and M Padula (2020), ‘DP15361 (S)Cars and the Great Recession‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 15361. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp15361