Authors
Martin S Eichenbaum, Lars Peter Hansen, Kenneth J Singleton
Publication date
1988/2/1
Journal
The Quarterly Journal of Economics
Volume
103
Issue
1
Pages
51-78
Publisher
MIT Press
Description
This paper investigates empirically a model of aggregate consumption and leisure decisions in which utility from goods and leisure is nontime-separable. The nonseparability of preferences accommodates intertemporal substitution or complementarity of leisure and thereby affects the comovements in aggregate compensation and hours worked. These cross-relations are examined empirically using postwar monthly U. S. data on quantities, real wages, and the real return on the one-month Treasury bill. The estimated values of the parameters governing preferences differ significantly from the values assumed in several studies of real business models. Several possible explanations of these discrepancies are discussed.
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