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http://hdl.handle.net/11718/25486
Title: | Targeted interventions: consumption dynamics and distributional effects |
Authors: | Chakrabarti, Anindya S. Mishra, Abinash Mohaghegh, Mohsen |
Keywords: | Consumption heterogeneity;Targeted interventions;Right-to-work act;Inequality |
Issue Date: | 2-Sep-2021 |
Publisher: | Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad |
Citation: | Chakrabati, A. S., Mishra, A., & Mohaghegh, M. (2021). Targeted interventions: Consumption dynamics and distributional effects. IIM Ahmedabad. |
Abstract: | Income distribution-based targeted interventions are quite common in developing economies. However, often due to institutional frictions, identification of the recipients happens at a lower frequency than the frequency of movement across income groups, leading to mis-identification of true and false recipients. What are the general equilibrium effects of such interventions? To measure the effects, we develop a heterogeneous agent production economy where agents face uninsurable income risks and we calibrate it to a novel panel dataset on monthly household income and consumption in India. We study the effects of persistent (identity-based) shocks as opposed to the usual temporary (income-based) income shocks, the difference being that in persistent payments individuals are guaranteed a payment across periods, regardless of their income status in future. We find that temporary interventions have muted distributional effects, while identity-based stimulus of the same size give rise to more prominent effects. In particular, a persistent income shock to the poorest decile equivalent to 0.6% of GDP leads to a 0.543% increase in consumption. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/11718/25486 |
Appears in Collections: | Working Papers |
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File | Description | Size | Format | |
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31.pdf | Targeted interventions: Consumption dynamics and distributional effects | 742.87 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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