Genuine Saving and Conspicuous Consumption
Abstract
Much evidence suggests that people are concerned with their relative consumption, i.e., their consumption in relation to the consumption of others. Yet, the social costs of conspicuous consumption have so far played little (or no) role in savings-based indicators of sustainable development. The present paper examines the implications of such behavior for measures of sustainable development by deriving analogues to genuine saving when people are concerned with their relative consumption. Unless the resource allocation is a social optimum, an indicator of positional externalities must be added to genuine saving to arrive at the proper measure of intertemporal welfare change. A numerical example based on U.S. and Swedish data suggests that conventional measures of genuine saving (which do not reflect conspicuous consumption) are likely to largely overestimate this welfare change. We also show how relative consumption concerns affect the way public investment ought to be reflected in genuine saving.
Other description
JEL: D03, D60, D62, E21, H21, I31, Q56
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Date
2014-11Author
Aronsson, Thomas
Johansson-Stenman, Olof
Keywords
welfare change
investment
saving
relative consumption
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
605
Language
eng