
Consumer Expenditures
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Analyzing our interest in individual economic well-being, Lebergott argues that consumer expenditure provides a better guide than the usual data on money income before tax. He also challenges continued reliance on a single consumption function in macro models. In other essays he uses the new data to demonstrate that the supposed "flawed prosperity" of the 1920s was not responsible for the Great Depression; points out the limitations of the usual consumer budget surveys; and contrasts the role of age, nativity, and other factors in creating interstate differences. The new data, which link to the official BEA estimates, will provide raw material to test and extend theories of how the consumer and the economy function.
Originally published in 1995.
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Content
Preface
Ch. 1 Measures of Well-Being: Income versus Consumption 3
Ch. 2 Was the Great Depression Driven by Consumption? 9
Ch. 3 Did Underconsumption End the Boom of the 1920s? 17
Ch. 4 Mass Consumption and "Americanization" 22
Ch. 5 The Elite's Share of Consumption: U.S. versus USSR 29
Ch. 6 Beyond the Consumption Function 39
Ch. 7 Tastes - and Other Determinants of Consumption 45
Ch. 8 Why State Consumption Patterns Differ 56
Ch. 9 Estimating Procedures: U.S Consumption, 1900-1929 71
Ch. 10 State Consumption, 1900-1982: Estimating Procedures for Appendix B 91
Ch. 11 Validity of Estimates 125
App. A. U.S. Estimates 147
App. B. State Estimates 187
Notes 249
Bibliography 277
Index 285
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