Consumption Emulation and Demand Regimes An Inclusive Modeling Approach
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| Publication date | 03-2026 |
| Journal | Review of Political Economy |
| Volume | Issue number | 38 | 2 |
| Pages (from-to) | 589-612 |
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| Abstract |
Personal income distributions robustly follow a two-class structure, with an exponential bulk of labour income accruing to the lower 95 - 99 % population share and an upper Pareto tail of the 1 - 5% richest, where capital income is concentrated. The implications of this regularity for macroeconomic outcomes, especially aggregate consumption, are not yet fully understood, though. We introduce this two-class structure into a Post-Keynesian consumption model with workers and capitalists corresponding to the two classes within the personal distribution. Agents consume according to idiosyncratic and social motives. Status consumption is microfounded within a perception network that replicates empirically observed inequality and social self-perceptions. Our findings indicate that the non-market interactions in perception networks are potentially highly relevant for aggregate outcomes and that they can shed some light on recent puzzles in the Post-Keynesian literature on growth regimes. In particular, we show how network segregation can explain differences in the degree of ‘wage-ledness’ of aggregate consumption. Aggregate representations of consumption might thus be misleading. Empirical studies should therefore take the regularities both in the income distribution as well as social network topologies into account.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1080/09538259.2023.2298746 |
| Other links | https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85182816118 |
| Downloads |
Consumption Emulation and Demand Regimes
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