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Intertemporal Asset Pricing Without Consumption Data

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1993

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American Economic Association
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Campbell, John Y. 1993. Intertemporal asset pricing without consumption data. American Economic Review 83(3): 487-512.

Abstract

This paper proposes a new way to generalize the insights of stark asset pricing theory to a multiperiod setting. The paper uses a loglinear approximation to the budget constraint to substitute out consumption from a standard intertemporal asset pricing model. In a homoscedastic lognormal setting, the consumption-wealth ratio is shown to depend on the elasticity of intertemporal substitution in consumption, while asset risk premia are determined by the coefficient of relative risk aversion. Risk premia are related to the covariances of asset returns with the market return and with news about the discounted value of all future market returns.

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Intertemporal Asset Pricing Without Consumption Data… : DASH Story 2015-11-29
This information (economics) is generally very expensive to access. Allowing free access to this information assists with the representation of marginalized people (First Nations) who can use this information which otherwise is difficult to afford so as to help them access the theoretical and linguistic underpinnings of the discipline of economics.