Overconfidence and Consumption over the Life Cycle
Working Paper No. 07-W12
Frank Caliendo and Kevin X.D. Huang
ABSTRACT [article]
Overconfidence is a widely documented phenomenon. In this paper, we
study the implications of consumer overconfidence in a life-cycle
consumption/saving model. Our main analytical result is a necessary
and sufficient condition under which any degree of overconfidence
concerning the mean return on savings can produce a hump in the
work-life consumption profile. This condition is almost always met
in the data. We show by simulations that overconfidence concerning
the variance of the return can have little effect on the long-run
average behavior of consumption over the life cycle, and that our
basic conclusion is fairly robust with various realistic
modifications to the baseline model. We interpret the general
applicability of our analytical framework and discuss our numerical
results in the light of aggregate consumption data.
Keywords and Phrases: Overconfidence, consumption, life cycle, time inconsistency, hump shape,
elasticity of intertemporal substitution
JEL Classification Numbers: D91, E21