Gender, Intra-Household Allocations, and Financial Decision-Making
Paper Session
Friday, Jan. 7, 2022 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM (EST)
- Chair: Taha Choukhmane, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
The Gender Gap in Household Bargaining Power: A Portfolio-Choice Approach
Abstract
When members of the same household have different risk preferences, whose preference matters and why? We propose an intrahousehold model that aggregates individual preferences at the household level, allowing us to back out the distribution and determinants of bargaining power from household portfolio choice. We structurally estimate the model using representative panels from Australia and Germany. Our results show a significant gender gap in bargaining power: in the average Australian (German) household, the relative importance of the husband’s risk preference is 44% (114%) higher than the wife’s. While the gap is partially explained by gender differences in individual characteristics such as income and employment, it is also due to gender effects. We further link the distribution of bargaining power to perceived gender norms in the cross-section of households.Gender Roles in the Allocation of Spending Rights within the Household: Evidence from Additional Credit Cards.
Abstract
In this paper, we provide evidence that traditional gender norms matter in the allocation of credit or spending rights within a household. We document that women give husbands, fathers and other men more credit than to mothers, daughters, or other women. In contrast, men give wives the same credit as parents, offspring, or other men. We argue that these findings are consistent with the man being allocated more decision power in a household's spending decisions as the traditional head of the family. In turn, we document that men use their assigned rights and indeed spend more when being allocated credit by their wives, mothers, daughters, or other women.Intra-household Frictions, Anchoring, and the Credit Card Debt Puzzle
Abstract
I study how intra-household frictions and anchoring contribute to the credit card debt puzzle, the co-holding of high-cost debt and low-yield liquid assets. First, I find couples co-hold 42 percent more as units than as individuals relative to income. Moreover, in a natural experiment, couples do not cooperate to reduce high-cost debt, suggesting that intra-household frictions contribute to co-holding. Second, I find individuals who regularly make credit card debt payments equal to or near the minimum account for 59 percent of individual co-holding. The evidence suggests anchoring to the minimum payment contributes to co-holding via these low payments.Discussant(s)
Alessandra Voena
,
Stanford University
Jawad Addoum
,
Cornell University
Da Ke
,
University of South Carolina
Corina Mommaerts
,
University of Wisconsin-Madison
JEL Classifications
- G5 - Household Finance
- D1 - Household Behavior and Family Economics