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Interpreting Life-Cycle Inequality Patterns asan Efficient Allocation: Mission Impossible?

Abstract

Data on consumption, earnings, wages and hours dispersion over the life cycle has been viewed as being at odds with an efficient allocation. We challenge this view. We show that a model with preference and wage shocks and full insurance produces the type of inequality patterns across age groups found in U.S. data. The efficient allocation model requires an increasing preference shifter dispersion profile to account for an increasing consumption dispersion profile. We examine U.S. data and find support for the view that the dispersion in preference shifters increases with age.Life Cycle Inequality, Efficient Allocation, Preference Shocks

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