The Black and white differential in income and consumption dynamics

Giacomo De Giorgi, Luca Gambetti, Costanza Naguib
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Abstract

With 20 years of PSID data, we document persistent racial differentials in consumption dynamics. Starting from similar positions in the consumption distribution Blacks end up in lower percentiles than Whites. Education, income, and wealth are three key drivers of these different dynamics. Blacks tend to save less, and hence have less buffer than the Whites to prevent them from falling in the lower part of the consumption distribution.

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黑人和白人在收入和消费动态方面的差异
通过 20 年的 PSID 数据,我们记录了消费动态中持续存在的种族差异。从消费分布中相似的位置开始,黑人的百分位数最终低于白人。教育、收入和财富是这些不同动态的三个主要驱动因素。黑人往往储蓄较少,因此比白人有更少的缓冲来防止他们陷入消费分布的低层。
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