Consumption and Health

David Domeij, Stockholm School of Economics
Magnus Johannesson, Stockholm School of Economics

A BEJM Contributions article.

Abstract

Many studies show that individuals do not perfectly smooth consumption at older ages. We argue that an important explanation is that health status declines with age, making consumption at older ages less desirable. We incorporate health status into a standard incomplete markets life-cycle model, by allowing the marginal utility of consumption to increase with health status. Life-cycle income, mortality risk and health status are exogenous in the model and calibrated on Swedish data. Life-cycle consumption is endogenous and matches well Swedish Consumer Expenditure Survey data; consumption expenditure increase with age until about 60 years, and then falls with about 25% to 80 years. An alternative model with mortality risk, but without health status, fails in capturing the fall in consumption with age seen in the data.

Submitted: April 8, 2005 · Accepted: January 2, 2006 · Published: May 25, 2006

Originally published in Contributions to Macroeconomics.

Recommended Citation

Domeij, David and Johannesson, Magnus (2006) "Consumption and Health," Contributions to Macroeconomics: Vol. 6 : Iss. 1, Article 6.
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/bejm/contributions/vol6/iss1/art6

 
 
 
 

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