Discussion paper

DP2651 Consumption-Savings Decisions with Quasi-Geometric Discounting

How do individuals with time-inconsistent preferences make consumption-savings decisions? We try to answer this question by considering the simplest possible form of consumption-savings problem, assuming that discounting is quasi-geometric. A solution to the decision problem is then a subgame-perfect equilibrium of a dynamic game between the individual's ?successive selves?. When the time horizon is finite, our question has a well-defined answer in terms of primitives. When the time horizon is infinite, we are left without a sharp answer: we cannot rule out the possibility that two identical individuals in the exact same situation make different decisions! In particular, there is a continuum of dynamic equilibria even if we restrict attention to equilibria where current consumption decisions depend only on current wealth.

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Citation

Smith Jr., A (2001), ‘DP2651 Consumption-Savings Decisions with Quasi-Geometric Discounting‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 2651. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp2651