COWLES FOUNDATION FOR RESEARCH IN
ECONOMICS
AT YALE UNIVERSITY
Box 208281
New Haven, CT 06520-8281

COWLES FOUNDATION DISCUSSION PAPER NO. 493
"An Integrated Model of Household Flow-of-Funds
Allocations"
David Backus and Douglas Purvis
1978
This paper extends the multivariate stock-adjustment model commonly used in empirical
studies of portfolio behavior in order to analyze the complete set of flow allocation
decisions made by households (including consumption, expenditures on durables and houses,
and various financial aggregates). The model is then confronted with quarterly household
sector data from the United States Flow of Funds Accounts for the period 1954 to 1975.
Besides presenting OLS estimates, we test parameter restrictions suggested by our
theoretical structure; the data supports the view that the explanatory power of the model
is enhanced by allowing non-zero cross-effects on interest rates and lagged stocks, and by
the integration of real and financial decisions.
While these results are encouraging, the specification requires a large number of
independent variables. This leads, in many cases, to rather poor determination of a number
of coefficients. We therefore combine with the data some inexact subjective information
about the coefficients, using the Theil-Goldberger mixed estimation technique. The OLS
estimates and the mixed estimates are then compared by examining the forecasting accuracy
of the model in- and out-of-sample. Overall the model performs very well, and the
simulation results confirm that inclusion of prior information is of considerable value
for forecasting purposes.
Since the publication of William Brainard and James Tobins pioneering paper,
"Pitfalls in Financial Model Building," the multivariate stock-adjustment model
has been widely used to study dynamic portfolio adjustment. The framework which they
developed is especially useful for analyzing a given sectors allocation of a
predetermined aggregate among competing alternatives; when dealing with the household
sector most applications (including their own) have specified wealth as a
predetermined aggregate which, in turn, was allocated to various assets and liabilities.
The purpose of the present paper is to use an extended version of the Pitfalls model to
examine in an integrated manner the household sectors allocation of income to
financial and real expenditures for the United States from 1954 to the present.
The plan of the paper is as follows. In Section I we outline our basic theoretical
framework, explain its motivation, and relate our approach to other recent flow-of-funds
models. Then in Section II we describe the data and present ordinary least squares
estimates of the model; in addition, we test for the "asset composition effect"
which is central to our particular extension of the Pitfalls model. In Section III we use
Brainard and Gary Smiths adaptation of the Theil-Goldberger mixed estimation
technique to combine subjective prior information about the coefficients with that
embodied in the data. We further examine in Section IV both the model and the value of our
a priori beliefs by performing in-sample and out-of-sample dynamic simulations.
Finally, conclusions are drawn in Section V.
See CFP 503 |