Household Composition and Savings: An Empirical Analysis based on the German SOEP Data
Content
New developments in the literature on household saving behavior have focused on the question how
household savings depend on the composition of a household. This question is of particular interest with
respect to aggregate savings when we consider the ongoing changes of the forms of living in recent years
(e.g. the tendency to smaller households). As a starting point this paper states some hypotheses about the
linkages between household composition and savings that stem from the recent literature. Variables that are
claimed to be relevant for household savings include the age sex composition of a household, the intra
household distribution of income and the number and age of children within a household. In order to check
how relevant these variables are for German households (i.e. do German households differ with respect to
these variables) we first describe the composition of German households and how this composition has
changed over the last two decades based on the GSOEP data. The variables of interest like age difference
between spouses, intra-household distribution of income, labor market participation of spouses are found to
be highly relevant among German households. In addition, a tendency to smaller households and later
household formation is found to name only a few facts. The last section then tries to test the respective
hypotheses about the household composition savings relation. The most important results found are the following
Children positively effect savings in younger households but have a negative influence on savings
in elder households. Double earners were found to save a significantly higher share of household income. We
also found some weak evidence that a longer remaining life expectancy of the wife together with a higher
wife’s income share positively effects a household’s savings rate.
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