Buying Less, but Shopping More: The Use of Non-Market Labor during a Crisis

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Economía LACEA Journal (e-ISSN: 1533- 6239)
LSE Press

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The current global financial crisis has caused output to drop in many developing countries, with the World Bank estimating that 55 million more people will live on less than $1.25 a day than expected precrisis. The extent to which the crisis will have long-term impacts depends on how poor people respond to the income declines. In this paper we use data from a previous economic crisis in Argentina to show the importance of a littlestudied mechanism that households can use to partly mitigate aggregate shocks, through changes in shopping behavior—in particular, in the amount of time devoted to shopping search.

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Pobreza, Poverty, Recesión económica, Economic recession, Comportamiento económico, Economic behavior, Comportamiento del consumidor, Consumer behavior, Crisis Financiera, Financial crisis

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