4.6 Article

Does Household Finance Matter? Small Financial Errors with Large Social Costs

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AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW
卷 109, 期 3, 页码 1116-1154

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AMER ECONOMIC ASSOC
DOI: 10.1257/aer.20161076

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Households with familiarity biases tilt their portfolios toward a few risky assets. The resulting mean-variance loss from portfolio underdiversification is equivalent to only a modest reduction of about 1 percent per year in a household's portfolio return. However, once we consider also the effect of familiarity biases on the asset-allocation and intertemporal consumption-savings decisions, the welfare loss is multiplied by a factor of four. In general equilibrium, the suboptimal decisions of households distort also aggregate growth, amplifying further the overall social welfare loss. Our findings demonstrate that financial markets are not a mere sideshow to the real economy and that improving the financial decisions of households can lead to large benefits, not just for individual households, but also for society.

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