Estimating Flexible Consumption Functions for Urban and Rural Households in China

Researchers examine household consumption in rural and urban China and provide key implications for the analysis of social welfare and inequality.

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Date

June 1, 2020

Authors

Jing Cao, Mun Ho, Wenhao Hu, and Dale Jorgensen

Publication

Journal Article

Reading time

1 minute

Abstract

There are few comprehensive studies of household consumption in China that covers all commodities due to data restrictions. This prevents the calculation of inequality indices based on consumption. This lack of coverage also makes analysis of policies that affect consumption difficult; economy-wide models used for analysis often have to employ simple consumption forms with unit income elasticities. We estimate a translog demand system distinguished by demographic characteristics, giving price and income elasticities that should be useful for policy analysis. We estimate separate functions for urban and rural households using household expenditure data and detailed commodity prices (1995–2006). This allows future analysis of social welfare and inequality based on consumption to supplement existing studies based on income. To illustrate an application of the model, we project consumption composition based on projected prices, incomes and demographic changes – aging, education improvement and urbanization.

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