Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5066447 | European Economic Review | 2016 | 20 Pages |
We use data for nearly 500,000 Danish households to study the relationship between household leverage prior to the financial crisis of 2007-2009 and the development in spending over the course of the crisis. We find a strong negative correlation between pre-crisis leverage and the change in spending during the crisis. This reflects that highly levered households spent a larger share of their income than their less-levered peers prior to the crisis, resulting in larger increases in debt in these years. Once we condition on the size of the pre-crisis change in debt, a high level of debt is no longer associated with a larger spending decline. Our results suggest that the larger decline in spending among high-leverage households is the result of a spending normalization pattern that is also found in other years, rather than a causal effect of high debt levels suppressing household spending during the crisis.