Lifecycle Hypothesis - Explained
What is the Lifecycle Hypothesis?
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What is the Life-Cycle Hypothesis?
The Life-Cycle Hypothesis (LCH) refers to an economic theory which involves people's spending, as well as, saving habits over the course of a lifetime. Franco Modigliani and Richard Brumberg, his student, developed the concept.
LCH presumes that people plan their spending over their lifetime, considering their future income. Also, they pile up debt at a young age, supposing future income would make it possible for them to pay off the debt.
They then save during middle age so as to maintain their consumption level once they retire. This brings about a "hump-shaped" pattern whereby there is a low accumulation of wealth during youth, as well as, old age, and high during middle age.
How did the Life-Cycle Hypothesis Develop?
The Life Cycle Hypothesis replaced a previous hypothesis which economist John Maynard Keynes developed. His belief was that savings were just another good and that the percentage which people earmarked for savings would rise as their incomes increased.
This brought about a potential challenge in that it meant that as a nation's incomes rose, a savings glut would result, and aggregate demand and also economic output would remain stagnant. There has been a support to the Life Cycle Hypothesis from subsequent research.
Related Topics
- Total utility
- Marginal Utility
- Diminishing Marginal Utility
- Marginal Utility per Dollar
- Rule of Maximizing Utility
- Consumption
- Consumer Goods
- Changes in Income Affect Consumer Choices
- Changes in Price Affect Consumer Choices
- Substitution Effect
- Income Effect
- Budget Constraints Create Demand Curves
- Lifecycle Model of Consumption
- Autonomous Consumption
- Permanent Income Hypothesis
- Lipstick Effect
- Engel's Law
- Consumerism
- Paradox of Thrift
- Ricardo Barro Effect
- Consumer Confidence Index
- The Wealth Effect
- Behavioral Economics