What s Driving Deleveraging? Evidence from the Survey of Consumer Finances

Similar documents
Discussion of Dissecting Saving Dynamics: Measuring Credit, Wealth, and Precautionary Effects by Carroll, Slacalek, and Sommer

Household Wealth and the Economy

Discussion of Why Has Consumption Remained Moderate after the Great Recession?

Mortgage Rates, Household Balance Sheets, and the Real Economy

Mortgage Rates, Household Balance Sheets, and Real Economy

Saving, wealth and consumption

Housing Markets and the Macroeconomy During the 2000s. Erik Hurst July 2016

House of Debt. How They (and You) Caused the Great Recession, and How We Can Prevent It from Happening Again, by A. Mian and A.

Box 1.3. How Does Uncertainty Affect Economic Performance?

Comment on "The Impact of Housing Markets on Consumer Debt"

1 This paper was prepared for an academic consultants meeting on Household Heterogeneity and Aggregate

According to the life cycle theory, households take. Do wealth inequalities have an impact on consumption? 1

In Debt and Approaching Retirement: Claim Social Security or Work Longer?

When Credit Bites Back: Leverage, Business Cycles, and Crises

Credit Market Imperfections, Credit Frictions and Financial Crises. Instructor: Dmytro Hryshko

Macroeconomic Impact of the Subprime Crisis

The Outlook for Consumer Spending and the Broader Economic Recovery

SPECIAL REPORT. TD Economics CONDITIONS ARE RIPE FOR AMERICAN CONSUMERS TO LEAD ECONOMIC GROWTH

Macroeconomics. Based on the textbook by Karlin and Soskice: Macroeconomics: Institutions, Instability, and the Financial System

Household Debt in America: A Look Across Generations Over Time

Characteristics of the euro area business cycle in the 1990s

The Impact of Global Aging on Saving, Investment, Asset Prices, and Returns

Corporate Profits and Business Fixed Investment:

Household debt and spending in the United Kingdom

The Wealth and Debt of Danish Families

Dissecting Saving Dynamics: Precautionary Effects

Household Balance Sheets, Consumption, and the Economic Slump Atif Mian Kamalesh Rao Amir Sufi

Safer Ratios, Riskier Portfolios: Banks Response to Government Aid. Ran Duchin Denis Sosyura. University of Michigan

From Subprime Loans to Subprime Growth? Evidence for the Euro Area

Financial Crises and Asset Prices. Tyler Muir June 2017, MFM

Consumption and House Prices in the Great Recession: Model Meets Evidence

MONETARY POLICY EXPECTATIONS AND BOOM-BUST CYCLES IN THE HOUSING MARKET*

DYNAMICS OF HOUSING DEBT IN THE RECENT BOOM AND BUST. Manuel Adelino (Duke) Antoinette Schoar (MIT Sloan and NBER) Felipe Severino (Dartmouth)

This PDF is a selection from a published volume from the National Bureau of Economic Research

The Run for Safety: Financial Fragility and Deposit Insurance

The role of debt in UK household spending decisions

DEMAND FOR MONEY. Ch. 9 (Ch.19 in the text) ECON248: Money and Banking Ch.9 Dr. Mohammed Alwosabi

Consumer Loans in Cambodia: Implications on Banking Stability

An Improved Framework for Assessing the Risks Arising from Elevated Household Debt

Discussion of Capital Injection to Banks versus Debt Relief to Households

Credit-Induced Boom and Bust

Why Financial Inclusion Matters: The Household Balance Sheet Perspective

State-dependent effects of monetary policy: The refinancing channel

Determinants of US Household Debt

Economic Watch Deleveraging after the burst of a credit-bubble Alfonso Ugarte / Akshaya Sharma / Rodolfo Méndez

China s macroeconomic imbalances: causes and consequences. John Knight and Wang Wei

Discussion of The Cost of Macroprudential Policy by Bjorn Richter, Moritz Schularick, Ilhyock Shim

The Evolving U.S. Economy and Household Debt

Consumption and House Prices in the Great Recession: Model Meets Evidence

8/16/2018. Part 1. Introduction. Chapter 1. Why Study Financial Markets and Institutions?

Mortgage Rates, Household Balance Sheets, and the Real Economy

Leverage, Re-leveraging, and Household Spending

The Effects of Experience on Investor Behavior: Evidence from India s IPO Lotteries

Operationalizing the Selection and Application of Macroprudential Instruments

Integrating Banking and Banking Crises in Macroeconomic Analysis. Mark Gertler NYU May 2018 Nobel/Riksbank Symposium

Economic Outlook and Forecast

Discussion of The International Transmission Channels of Monetary Policy Claudia Buch, Matthieu Bussiere, Linda Goldberg, and Robert Hills

William C Dudley: A bit better, but very far from best US economic outlook and the challenges facing the Federal Reserve

Global Financial Crisis and China s Countermeasures

Financial Regulation and the Economic Security of Low-Income Households

Exporting Uncertainty: The Impact of Brexit on Corporate America.. Murillo Campello Cornell University & NBER

Consumer Spending and Saving

MAKING FINANCIAL GLOBALIZATION MORE INCLUSIVE

The Real Effects of Disrupted Credit Evidence from the Global Financial Crisis

LECTURE 9 The Effects of Credit Contraction and Financial Crises: Balance Sheet and Cash Flow Effects. October 24, 2018

TCH Research Note: 2016 Federal Reserve s Stress Testing Scenarios

Changing Retirement Behavior in the Wake of the Financial Crisis

The Changing Face of Debt and Financial Fragility at Older Ages

Discussion of "The Value of Trading Relationships in Turbulent Times"

Discussion: Reallocation of banks' portfolio during a liquidity shock: Evidence from the 2007 and 2009 financial crisis by P. Pessarossi and F.

Slipping and Sliding: Wealth of U.S. Households Over the Financial Crisis

The U.S. Housing Market

Saving, Investment, and the Financial System

Sticky Wages and Prices: Aggregate Expenditure and the Multiplier. 5Topic

THE SHRINKING CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT: Remarks by Thomas C. Melzer St. Louis Society of Financial Analysts St. Louis, Missouri May 28, 1992

EVALUATING THE PERFORMANCE OF COMMERCIAL BANKS IN INDIA. D. K. Malhotra 1 Philadelphia University, USA

Chapter 2 CONSUMER LOANS IN CAMBODIA: IMPLICATIONS ON FINANCIAL STABILITY. By Channarith Meng *

Monetary Easing and Financial Instability

Property debt overhang: the case of Irish SMEs

Policy Reforms after the Crisis

Ination Expectations and Consumption Expenditure

Joseph S Tracy: A strategy for the 2011 economic recovery

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 21 FISCAL POLICY April 10, 2018

General Economic Outlook Recession! Will it be Short and Shallow?

What Happens During Recessions, Crunches and Busts?

Global Business Cycles

Q Flow Of Funds: Higher Interest Rates Loom Over Debt-Heavy Balance Sheets

Estimating Key Economic Variables: The Policy Implications

The Volatility You Can See Coming

American Household Debt Post 2008 Credit Crisis

State Dependency of Monetary Policy: The Refinancing Channel

Discussant Comments on: Leverage, Business Cycles and Monetary Policy, by Brunnermeier and Sannikov

Financial cycle in Iceland

Preliminary: The effects of fiscal policy in the short run

The effect of Loan Supply Shocks on Bank Lending and the Real Economy: Evidence from Slovenia

What the Consumer Expenditure Survey Tells us about Mortgage Instruments Before and After the Housing Collapse

After housing s best year in a decade, what s next?

The Effect of House Prices on Household Borrowing: A New Approach *

VII. Short-Run Economic Fluctuations

Assessing the Spillover Effects of Changes in Bank Capital Regulation Using BoC-GEM-Fin: A Non-Technical Description

Transcription:

What s Driving Deleveraging? Evidence from the 2007-2009 Survey of Consumer Finances Karen Dynan Brookings Institution Wendy Edelberg Congressional Budget Office These slides were prepared for a presentation at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis conference Restoring Household Financial Stability after the Great Recession: Why Household Balance Sheets Matter on February 7, 2013. The views expressed are our own and should not be interpreted as those of the Congressional Budget Office.

2 Consumer spending has been remarkably weak in this recovery Contribution of Real Personal Consumption Expenditures to the Cyclical Variation in Real GDP following Recessions Note. Percentage difference from trough as a ratio of potential GDP. Source. Congressional Budget Office (2012). Figure 3

Ratio Ratio 3 What role has household debt/leverage played? 1.6 Household Debt Relative to Income 0.7 Mortgage Debt Relative to Aggregate Value of Homes 1.4 0.6 1.2 0.5 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.3 0.4 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.0 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 0.0 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 Note: Last value is 2012:Q2. Data from U.S. flow of funds accounts and U.S. national income and product Note. Shaded area denotes period of rapid home price declines. Data from the U.S. flow of funds accounts. Last value is 2012:Q2.

Popular interpretation of what has been going on 4

5 What are the linkages between excess debt/leverage and consumer spending? Standard theory: C i = f(y i, W i, r i, preferences, [uncertainty], [credit constraints]) Beyond the stylized models:» Households might be uncomfortable with debt/leverage beyond a certain level Makes job loss more costly (might have to default) Might lose future access to credit» Financial institutions might be less willing to lend to and or refinance loans for high debt/leverage households

Trough-to-peak change in unemployment rate 6 Regional data suggest an important role for household balance sheet shocks High-Debt/Housing Bust States Saw the Biggest Collapse in their Economies 12 10 Identification problem: High debt/leverage areas also saw the largest declines in housing wealth. -70-50 -30-10 8 6 4 2 0 Theory and lots of empirical evidence suggest strong link between consumption and wealth, but what about consumption and debt/leverage? Peak-to-trough % change in home prices Note. Based on data from First American Corelogic and U.S. Department of Labor.

Previous literature on the household debt crisis Many papers on various aspects of household finances leading up to and during the crisis. A couple of papers on the relationship between debt/leverage and consumption in the wake of the crisis:» Some researchers have found evidence suggesting a link: Mian, Rao, and Sufi (2011) Dynan (2012).» But others have been skeptical: Pence (2012) Cooper (2012). 7

8 Our paper looks at two related questions Has excessive debt contributed to the weak performance of consumption? What are the underpinnings of any such linkage? Reasons to care:» Speaks to the underlying strength of the economy (important for macro policy decisions).» Speaks to the need for special policies such as debt forgiveness initiatives and programs to facilitate refinancing.

9 Preview of findings Households propensity to report cutting back their consumption in 2009 rises significantly with leverage».. even after controlling for wealth, income, and other factors that would be expected to influence consumption. Evidence that several factors contribute to the relationship:» Higher leverage associated with reduced access to credit.» The most highly leveraged households were less likely to refinance than their counterparts with less leverage.» Higher leverage associated with a more pronounced precautionary reaction.

10 Key background information 2007-2009 Survey of Consumer Finances panel:» Regular 2007 cross-section plus limited follow-up of the same households in 2009» Comprehensive balance sheet information; rich set of attitudinal questions; representative (after weighting). Measuring leverage:» No consensus in literature about how to do this: we look at both debt/income and debt/assets.» Focus on leverage as of 2007 because ex post (2009) levels may be endogenous with respect to some of the outcome variables we consider.

Debt and Cutting Back 11

12 Outcome variable Households were asked in 2009: Over [the past two years], have you (and your family) made decisions to change the ways you arrange your money or investments? Some responses consistent with cutting back consumption: Spend less, cut back Budget expenses more carefully, more cautious about buying/spending Use old things longer Buy less expensive things No money to spend beyond necessities Save more

Share of sample "cutting back" Share of sample "cutting back" Share of sample "cutting back" 13 Cutting back rises with leverage Even in subsamples where consumption unlikely to be damped by wealth and income effects. Full sample 0.5 Homeowners with rise in home value 0.5 Homeowners with rise in home value, Y, NW 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.1 0 1 2 3 4 Quartile of 2007 D/Y 0 1 2 3 4 Quartile of 2007 D/Y 0 1 2 3 4 Quartile of 2007 D/Y

14 Probit regressions: dep var = cutting back Sample All All All Age class -.126** (.026) -.128** (.026) -.121** (.026) Had unemployment spell.406** (.089).404** (.088).400** (.089) Has access to funds -.047 (.073) -.048 (.074) -.040 (.074) Okay to use credit.071 (.071).067 (.071).065 (.071) Declined for credit.329** (.093).333** (.094).331** (.094) Expect improved economy.119* (.067).116* (.067).120* (.068) Expect large expenses.107* (.061).102 (.062).105* (.062) (income) class -.008 (.011) -.007 (.011) -.008 (.012) Income uncertain -.007 (.011) -.006 (.070).002 (.070) % credit limit used.000 (.000).000 (.000).000 (.000) Liquid assets / income -.013 (.029) -.010 (.029) -.010 (.029) (net worth) class -.004 (.010) -.005 (.010) -.004 (.010) Willing to take risks -.149** (.066) -.155** (.066) -.155** (.066) 2007 D/Y class.180** (.033) 2007 D/Y quartile 1 -.777** (.179) 2007 D/Y quartile 2 -.470** (.168) 2007 D/Y quartile 3 -.343 (.154) 2007 D/Y quartile 4 -.197 (.153) 2007 D/Y class (detailed).126** (.047) 2007 D/Y class (detailed) ^2 -.005 (.004) Sample restricted to homeowners that did not move. * significant at the 10% or better level; ** significant at the 5% or better level.

15 Related outcome: saving Households were asked in 2007 and 2009: Over the past year, would you say that your (family s) spending exceeded your (family s) income, that it was about the same as your income, or that you spent less than your income? We look at changes in the share of households reporting having saved and also at transitions from saving to not saving and vice versa.

Share of sample Share of sample 16 Higher leverage not associated with a greater inclination to save 2007 Savers Who Were Not Saving in 2009 0.5 2007 Non-Savers Who Were Saving in 2009 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.1 0 1 2 3 4 Quartile of 2007 D/Y 0 1 2 3 4 Quartile of 2007 D/Y Robust to splitting sample and regression analysis.

The more cutting back / less saving conundrum may be explained by quirks in the saving measure 17 Saving measure backward-looking (past year) whereas cutting back may be capturing changes the household intends but hasn t had the willingness or wherewithal to execute. Respondents instructed to include purchases of autos and spending on other investments in saving. We only know whether respondents saved or didn t saving so can t tell if savers saved more or dissaved less.

18 Why Are Those with More Debt More Likely to Be Cutting Back?

Share of sample Share of sample Ratio 19 Higher leverage associated with reduced access to credit between 2007 and 2009 Applying for credit 0.7 Denied for credit 0.7 Share denied relative to share applied 0.5 0.6 0.5 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.1 0 1 2 3 4 Quartile of 2007 D/A 0 1 2 3 4 Quartile of 2007 D/A 0 1 2 3 4 Quartile of 2007 D/A

Ratio 20 The most highly leveraged households were less likely to refinance Share with mortgage that refinanced 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 But more work needs to be done as the incentive to refinance should be correlated with the amount of debt held 0 1 2 3 4 Quartile of 2007 D/A

A couple of questions that might help us understand if high debt induced more precautionary behavior 21 Which of the following statements comes closest to describing the amount of financial risk that you are willing to take when you save or make investments? 1. Take substantial financial risks expecting to earn substantial returns 2. Take above average financial risks expecting to earn above average returns 3. Take average financial risks expecting to earn average returns 4. Not willing to take any financial risks About how much do you think you (and your family need to have in savings for emergencies and other unexpected things that may come up?

Share of sample Dollars Some evidence of a greater precautionary response among those with higher leverage 22 Less willing to take financial risks in 2009 than in 2007 0.4 Median desired precautionary reserves 12000 10000 8000 2007 2009 0.2 6000 4000 2000 0 1 2 3 4 Quartile of 2007 D/Y 0 1 2 3 4 Quartile of 2007 D/Y

23 Conclusions Results from the 2007-2009 Survey of Consumer Finances panel consistent with earlier research suggesting that high debt/leverage has contributed to lackluster consumption.» Households propensity to report cutting back their consumption in 2009 rises significantly with leverage even after controlling for wealth, income, and other factors that would be expected to influence consumption. We find evidence that the linkage arises from both leveragerelated constraints imposed on households (credit access, including an inability to refinance) and from leverage-related choices they are making (as a result of a stronger shift toward precautionary behavior)

24 More work needs to be done For macro policy purposes, need to know more about the quantitative impact of high debt and leverage on demand (not clear how you do it with this data set). Need to drill down further into the underpinnings of the relationship:» Simple analysis here does not cleanly identify the different channels of causation (need to control for more things)» Important issue because of the implications for specialdebt related policy initiatives.