iBusiness

Volume 4, Issue 3 (September 2012)

ISSN Print: 2150-4075   ISSN Online: 2150-4083

Google-based Impact Factor: 3.8  Citations  

Is Consumption in the United States and Japan Too Much or Too Little?

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DOI: 10.4236/ib.2012.43029    4,298 Downloads   6,392 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

This article reports on the results of an empirical examination of whether consumption in the United States and Japan is too much or too little relative to productivity in these countries (1993-2011). Findings reveal some clear and common characteristics of both countries for the sample period. The most typical one occurred during financial crises around 2008, which is often called the Lehman shock. In both countries, consumers had considerably reduced consumption around that period. The IT boom collapse at the beginning of the 2000s also diminished consumption in the United States. This paper examines impulse responses to trace the effect of a productivity shock to one of the innovations on the current and future value of consumption. Findings indicate that the effect of the shock of productivity on consumption is long both countries

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Kurihara, Y. and Tomimura, K. (2012) Is Consumption in the United States and Japan Too Much or Too Little?. iBusiness, 4, 228-234. doi: 10.4236/ib.2012.43029.

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