Report

Modigliani Meets Minsky: Inequality, Debt, and Financial Fragility in America, 1950-2016


Abstract: This paper studies the secular increase in U.S. household debt and its relation to growing income inequality and financial fragility. We exploit a new household-level data set that covers the joint distributions of debt, income, and wealth in the United States over the past seven decades. The data show that increased borrowing by middle-class families with low income growth played a central role in rising indebtedness. Debt-to-income ratios have risen most dramatically for households between the 50th and 90th percentiles of the income distribution. While their income growth was low, middle-class families borrowed against the sizable housing wealth gains from rising home prices. Home equity borrowing accounts for about half of the increase in U.S. housing debt between the 1980s and 2007. The resulting debt increase made balance sheets more sensitive to income and house price fluctuations and turned the American middle class into the epicenter of growing financial fragility.

Keywords: household portfolios; inequality; financial fragility; household debt;

JEL Classification: D14; D31; E21; E44;

Access Documents

File(s): File format is text/html https://www.newyorkfed.org/research/staff_reports/sr924.html
Description: Summary

File(s): File format is application/pdf https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/research/staff_reports/sr924.pdf
Description: Full text

Authors

Bibliographic Information

Provider: Federal Reserve Bank of New York

Part of Series: Staff Reports

Publication Date: 2020-05-01

Number: 924