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Author

  • Koeniger, Winfried (7)
  • Bertola, Giuseppe (2)
  • Hintermaier, Thomas (2)
  • Fella, Giulio (1)
  • Frache, Serafin (1)
  • Prat, Julien (1)
  • Ramelet, Marc-Antoine (1)

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  • 2006 (1)
  • 2013 (1)
  • 2014 (1)
  • 2015 (1)
  • 2016 (1)
  • 2018 (1)
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Document Type

  • Working Paper (7)

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  • English (7)

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Keywords

  • Consumption (3)
  • Collateral constraints (1)
  • Consumer confidence (1)
  • Einkommen (1)
  • European household portfolios (1)
  • Home ownership (1)
  • Household debt (1)
  • Housing tenure (1)
  • Incomplete markets (1)
  • Insurance (1)
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Institute

  • Center for Financial Studies (CFS) (7)
  • Wirtschaftswissenschaften (5)

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Consumption smoothing and liquidity income redistribution (2006)
Bertola, Giuseppe ; Koeniger, Winfried
We show theoretically that income redistribution benefits borrowingconstrained individuals more than is implied by standard relative-income and uninsurable-risk considerations. Empirically, we find in international opinion-survey data that younger and lower-income individuals express stronger support for government redistribution in countries where consumer credit is less easily available. This evidence supports our theoretical perspective if such individuals are more strongly affected by tighter credit supply, in that expectations of higher incomes in the future increase their propensity to borrow. JEL Classification: E21
Human capital and optimal redistribution (2014)
Koeniger, Winfried ; Prat, Julien
We characterize optimal redistribution in a dynastic family model with human capital. We show how a government can improve the trade-off between equality and incentives by changing the amount of observable human capital. We provide an intuitive decomposition for the wedge between human-capital investment in the laissez faire and the social optimum. This wedge differs from the wedge for bequests because human capital carries risk: its returns depend on the non-diversi…able risk of children's ability. Thus, human capital investment is encouraged more than bequests in the social optimum if human capital is a bad hedge for consumption risk.
Differences in euro-area household finances and their relevance for monetary-policy transmission (2019)
Hintermaier, Thomas ; Koeniger, Winfried
This paper quantifies the extent of heterogeneity in consumption responses to changes in real interest rates and house prices in the four largest economies in the euro area: France, Germany, Italy, and Spain. We first calibrate a life-cycle incomplete-markets model with a financial asset and housing to match the large heterogeneity of households asset portfolios, observed in the Household Finance and Consumption Survey (HFCS) for these countries. We then show that the heterogeneity in household finances implies that responses of consumption to changes in the real interest rate and in house prices differ substantially across countries, and within countries by household characteristics such as age, housing tenure, and asset positions. The different consumption responses quantified in this paper point towards important heterogeneity in monetary-policy transmission in the euro area.
Buffer-stock saving and households' response to income shocks (2016)
Fella, Giulio ; Frache, Serafin ; Koeniger, Winfried
We use the Italian Survey of Household Income and Wealth, a rather unique dataset with a long time dimension of panel information on consumption, income and wealth, to structurally estimate a buffer-stock saving model. We exploit the information contained in the joint dynamics of income, consumption and wealth to quantify the degree of insurance against income risk. The estimated model implies that Italian households can insure between 89 and 95 percent of a transitory and between 7 and 9 percent of a permanent income shock. Compared to existing empirical estimates for the same dataset, our findings suggest that Italian households do not have access to significant insurance beyond self-insurance.
Hidden insurance in a moral hazard economy (2013)
Bertola, Giuseppe ; Koeniger, Winfried
We consider an economy where individuals privately choose effort and trade competitively priced securities that pay off with effort-determined probability. We show that if insurance against a negative shock is sufficiently incomplete, then standard functional form restrictions ensure that individual objective functions are optimized by an effort and insurance combination that is unique and satisfies first- and second-order conditions. Modeling insurance incompleteness in terms of costly production of private insurance services, we characterize the constrained inefficiency arising in general equilibrium from competitive pricing of nonexclusive financial contracts.
Household debt and crises of confidence (2015)
Hintermaier, Thomas ; Koeniger, Winfried
We show that the size of collateralized household debt determines an economy’s vulnerability to crises of confidence. The house price feeds back on itself by contributing to a liquidity effect, which operates through the value of housing in a collateral constraint. Over a specific range of debt levels this liquidity feedback effect is strong enough to give rise to multiplicity of house prices. In a dynamic setup, we conceptualize confidence as a realization of rationally entertainable belief-weightings of multiple future prices. This delivers debt-level-dependent bounds on the extent to which confidence may drive house prices and aggregate consumption.
Home ownership and monetary policy transmission (2018)
Koeniger, Winfried ; Ramelet, Marc-Antoine
We present empirical evidence on the heterogeneity in monetary policy transmission across countries with different home ownership rates. We use household-level data together with shocks to the policy rate identified from high-frequency data. We find that housing tenure reacts more strongly to unexpected changes in the policy rate in Germany and Switzerland –the OECD countries with the lowest home ownership rates– compared with existing evidence for the U.S. An unexpected decrease in the policy rate by 25 basis points increases the home ownership rate by 0.8 percentage points in Germany and by 0.6 percentage points in Switzerland. The response of non-housing consumption in Switzerland is less heterogeneous across renters and mortgagors, and has a different pattern across age groups than in the U.S. We discuss economic explanations for these findings and implications for monetary policy.
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