Research / BFI Working PaperDec 04, 2019

Perceived Precautionary Savings Motives: Evidence from FinTech

Francesco D'Acunto, Thomas Rauter, Christoph Scheuch, Michael Weber

We study the consumption response to the provision of credit lines to individuals that previously did not have access to credit combined with the possibility to elicit directly a large set of preferences, beliefs, and motives. As expected, users react to the availability of credit by increasing their spending permanently and reallocating consumption from non-discretionary to discretionary goods and services. Surprisingly, though, liquid users react more than others and this pattern is a robust feature of the data. Moreover, liquid users lower their savings rate, but do not tap into negative deposits. The credit line seems to act as a form of insurance against future negative shocks and its mere presence makes users spend their existing liquidity without accumulating any debt. By eliciting preferences, beliefs, and motives directly, we show these results are not fully consistent with models of financial constraints, buffer stock models with and without durables, present-bias preferences, uncertainty about future income, bequest motives, or the canonical life-cycle permanent income model. We label this channel the perceived precautionary savings channel, because liquid households behave as if they faced strong precautionary savings motives even though no observables suggest they should based on standard theoretical models.

More Research From These Scholars

BFI Working Paper Sep 10, 2019

IQ, Expectations, and Choice

Francesco D'Acunto, Daniel Hoang, Maritta Paloviita, Michael Weber
Topics:  K-12 Education, Monetary Policy, Financial Markets, Higher Education & Workforce Training
Journal Article May 14, 2021

Exposure to Grocery Prices and Inflation Expectations

Francesco D’Acunto, Ulrike Malmendier, Juan Ospina, Michael Weber
Topics:  Uncategorized
BFI Working Paper Aug 16, 2019

Managing Households’ Expectations with Simple Economic Policies

Francesco D’Acunto, Daniel Hoang, Michael Weber
Topics:  Fiscal Studies, Monetary Policy